3 research outputs found

    System Qualities Ontology, Tradespace and Affordability (SQOTA) Project Phase 5

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    Motivation and Context: One of the key elements of the SERC's research strategy is transforming the practice of systems engineering and associated management practices- "SE and Management Transformation (SEMT)." The Grand Challenge goal for SEMT is to transform the DoD community 's current systems engineering and management methods, processes, and tools (MPTs) and practices away from sequential, single stovepipe system, hardware-first ,document-driven, point- solution, acquisition-oriented approaches; and toward concurrent, portfolio and enterprise-oriented, hardware-software-human engineered, model-driven, set-based, full life cycle approaches.This material is based upon work supported, in whole or in part, by the U.S. Department of Defense through the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering (ASD(R&E)) under Contract H98230-08-D-0171 and HQ0034-13-D-0004 (TO 0060).This material is based upon work supported, in whole or in part, by the U.S. Department of Defense through the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering (ASD(R&E)) under Contract H98230-08-D-0171 and HQ0034-13-D-0004 (TO 0060)

    Do consumers talk about the software in my product? An Exploratory Study of IoT Products on Amazon

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    Consumer product reviews are an invaluable source of data because they contain a wide range of information that could help requirement engineers to meet user needs. Recent studies have shown that tweets about software applications and reviews on App Stores contain useful information, which enable a more responsive software requirements elicitation. However, all of these studies' subjects are merely software applications. Information on system software, such as embedded software, operating systems, and firmware, are overlooked, unless reviews of a product using them are investigated. Challenges in investigating these reviews could come from the fact that there is a huge volume of data available, as well as the fact that reviews of such products are diverse in nature, meaning that they may contain information mostly on hardware components or broadly on the product as a whole. Motivated by these observations, we conduct an exploratory study using a dataset of 7198 review sentences from 6 Internet of Things (IoT) products. Our qualitative analysis demonstrates that a sufficient quantity of software related information exists in these reviews. In addition, we investigate the performance of two supervised machine learning techniques (Support Vector Machines and Convolutional Neural Networks) for classification of information contained in the reviews. Our results suggest that, with a certain setup, these two techniques can be used to classify the information automatically with high precision and recall
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