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Acceptance ratio and list of papers

A total of 60 papers were submitted. 49 were full papers. Among those, 14 have been accepted as full papers. That is: 29% acceptance ratio for full papers. The total number of accepted papers is 21. That is: a 35% acceptance ratio can be reported for short papers.

The list of accepted papers for REFSQ’09 can be found below. The papers are simply listed alphabetically by the name of the first author, hence the order does not indicate any kind of ranking, nor does it reflect the order of presentation at the conference.

  • Joy Beatty and James Hulgan. Experiences with a Requirements Object Model
  • Alan Davis and Ann Hickey. A Quantitative Assessment of Requirements Engineering Publications — 1963-2008
  • Jose Luis de la Vara and Juan Sanchez. BPMN-Based Specification of Task Descriptions: Approach and Lessons Learnt
  • Nina Fogelström, Sebastian Barney, Aybüke Aurum and Anders Hederstierna. When Product Managers Gamble with Requirements: Attitudes to Value and Risk
  • Robin Gandhi and Seok-Won Lee. Assurance Case Driven Case Study Design for Requirements Engineering Research
  • Andrea Herrmann, Armin Wallnöfer and Barbara Paech. Specifying Changes Only – A Case Study on Delta Requirements
  • Kristine Karlsen, Neil Maiden and Andruid Kerne. Inventing Requirements with Creativity Support Tools
  • Mahvish Khurum, Tony Gorschek, Lefteris Angelis and Robert Feldt. A Controlled Experiment of a Method for Early Requirements Triage Utilizing Product Strategies
  • Leonid Kof. Translation of Textual Specifications to Automata by Means of Discourse Context Modeling
  • Paula Laurent and Jane Cleland-Huang. Lessons Learned from Open Source Projects for Facilitating online Requirements Processes
  • Zude Li, Quazi Rahman, Remo Ferrari and Nazim Madhavji. Does Requirements Clustering Lead to Modular Design?
  • Christoph Marhold, Clotilde Rohleder, Camille Salinesi and Joerg Doerr. Clarifying Non-Functional Requirements to Improve User Acceptance – Experience at Siemens
  • Birgit Penzenstadler, Ernst Sikora and Klaus Pohl. A Requirements Reference Model for Model-based Requirements Engineering in the Automotive Domain
  • Gilles Perrouin, Erwan Brottier, Benoit Baudry and Yves Le Traon. Composing Models for Detecting Inconsistencies: A Requirements Engineering Perspective
  • Gil Regev, Olivier Hayard, Donald Gause and Alain Wegmann. Toward a Service Management Quality Model
  • Norbert Seyff, Florian Graf, Neil Maiden and Paul Grünbacher. Scenarios in the Wild: Experiences with Mobile Tool supported Contextual Requirements Discovery
  • Richard Berntsson Svensson, Tony Gorschek and Bjorn Regnell. Quality Requirements in Practice: An Interview Study in Requirements Engineering for Embedded Systems
  • Tom Tourwe, Wim Codenie, Nick Boucart and Vladimir Blagojevic. Conquering the Release Definition Myths: Collaborative Value Quantification
  • Thein Than Tun, Yijun Yu, Robin Laney and Bashar Nuseibeh. A Tool-Supported Approach to Problem Composition
  • Kristopher Welsh and Pete Sawyer. Requirements Tracing to Support Change in Dynamic Adaptive Systems
  • Krzysztof Wnuk, Bjorn Regnell and Claes Schrewelius. Architecting and Coordinating Thousands of Requirements – An Industrial Interview Study in the Mobile Handset Domain