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Programme is online

Tenth International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering (CreaRE 2021)

Only a few days until the tenth International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering CreaRE 2021 will take place. As a satellite event of REFSQ21, our workshop will take place on Monday, 12th of April.

Deadline Extended

Tenth International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering (CreaRE 2021)

Date: 12 April 2021, collocated with REFSQ’21

Place: Online

Submission Deadline has been Extended

The submission deadline has been extended by one week. The new submission deadline is: Monday, February 15, 2021. Please consider submitting your work to the 10th International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering (CreaRE 2021).

Call for Papers 2021

Tenth International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering (CreaRE 2021)

Date: 12 April 2021, collocated with REFSQ’21

Place: Online

Workshop Topic, Background and Motivation

Where do great requirements come from? The development of a new IT system or the replacement or radical enhancement of an existing IT system provides the chance to gather innovative ideas, to make radical improvements, and to reinvent the work process. However, current techniques for analyzing customer-provided documents and existing systems lead to identifying only the basic requirements that the IT system should fulfill, and elicitation techniques such as stakeholder interviews help identify ideas for the incremental improvement of a system. Thus, these standard techniques lead to a conservative requirements specification with little innovation potential.

Call for Papers 2020

Ninth International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering (CreaRE 2020)

Date: 23 June 2020, collocated with REFSQ’20

Place: Pisa, Italy

Workshop Topic, Background and Motivation

Where do great requirements come from? The development of a new IT system or the replacement or radical enhancement of an existing IT system provides the chance to gather innovative ideas, to make radical improvements, and to reinvent the work process. However, current techniques for analyzing customer-provided documents and existing systems lead to identifying only the basic requirements that the IT system should fulfill, and elicitation techniques such as stakeholder interviews help identify ideas for the incremental improvement of a system. Thus, these standard techniques lead to a conservative requirements specification with little innovation potential.