Status Quo in Requirements Engineering: A Theory and a Global Family of Surveys
Stefan Wagner, Daniel M\'endez Fern\'andez, Michael Felderer, Antonio, Vetr\'o, Marcos Kalinowski, Roel Wieringa, Dietmar Pfahl, Tayana Conte,, Marie-Therese Christiansson, Desmond Greer, Casper Lassenius, Tomi, M\"annist\"o, Maleknaz Nayebi, Markku Oivo, Birgit Penzenstadler

TL;DR
This paper develops and empirically validates a comprehensive theory of Requirements Engineering (RE) practices through a large-scale international survey, providing insights and guidance for practitioners and researchers.
Contribution
It introduces a validated, empirically-based theory of RE, derived from global survey data, that informs effective RE processes and guides future research.
Findings
No significant regional differences in RE practices.
Interviews, meetings, and prototyping are most used techniques.
Requirements are mostly documented textually.
Abstract
Requirements Engineering (RE) has established itself as a software engineering discipline during the past decades. While researchers have been investigating the RE discipline with a plethora of empirical studies, attempts to systematically derive an empirically-based theory in context of the RE discipline have just recently been started. However, such a theory is needed if we are to define and motivate guidance in performing high quality RE research and practice. We aim at providing an empirical and valid foundation for a theory of RE, which helps software engineers establish effective and efficient RE processes. We designed a survey instrument and theory that has now been replicated in 10 countries world-wide. We evaluate the propositions of the theory with bootstrapped confidence intervals and derive potential explanations for the propositions. We report on the underlying theory and…
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