dc.contributor
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria de Serveis i Sistemes d'Informació
dc.contributor
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. inSSIDE - integrated Software, Service, Information and Data Engineering
dc.contributor.author
Cares, Carlos
dc.contributor.author
Franch Gutiérrez, Javier
dc.contributor.author
Mayol Sarroca, Enric
dc.contributor.author
Quer, Carme
dc.date.issued
2011-01-17
dc.identifier
Cares, C. [et al.]. A reference model for i*. A: "Social modeling for requirements engineering". The MIT Press. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2011, p. 573-606.
dc.identifier
978-0-262-24055-0
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2117/17924
dc.description.abstract
Agent-oriented models are frequently used in disciplines such as agent-oriented requirements engineering, requirements
engineering and organizational process modelling. i* is currently one of the most widespread notations used for this purpose. Due to both its dissemination and its highly strategic nature, instead of a single definition, several groups have formulated different variants, which define in a slightly different way the basic concepts of the language, as well as propose particular constructs that fit into the particular interests of these groups. In this chapter we first review these proposals and then we present a reference model that establishes the concepts and relationships that are
fundamental in i*. The reference model is expressed as a UML class diagram (with
OCL constraints) together with a vocabulary of the presented terms. Most of the included concepts are common to the seminal i* proposal, the GRL and the diverse variations used in the context of the Tropos methodology. For those concepts that are not shared by these analysed variants, the reference model tries to reconcile the different views whenever possible. The reference model allows determining the differences of any existing i* variant with respect to the model, and also to know how
much different a new variant would be from the core of i*. The variants can be expressed by applying some refactoring operations on the UML class diagram. We
illustrate this situation by applying refactoring to some of the analysed proposals.
dc.description.abstract
Postprint (published version)
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.publisher
The MIT Press. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
dc.rights
Restricted access - publisher's policy
dc.subject
Àrees temàtiques de la UPC::Informàtica::Enginyeria del software
dc.subject
Requirements engineering
dc.subject
Object-oriented methods (Computer science)
dc.subject
Mètodes orientats a l'objecte (Informàtica)
dc.subject
Programari -- Desenvolupament
dc.title
A reference model for i*
dc.type
Part of book or chapter of book