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Measuring consensus and conflict among stakeholders in emergency response information system requirements negotiations
Catherine Lowry Campbell
author
Fadi Deek
author
Murray Turoff
author
Bartel A. Van De Walle
author
2004
Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium
Brussels
English
This paper introduces the experimental design we developed for the analysis of asynchronous negotiations among five different stakeholders as they work towards consensus on the functional system requirements that are needed for a common emergency response information system. We present three analytical preference models to measure the evolving consensus and conflict among the stakeholders as they modify their preferences during the negotiation. We illustrate the use of these techniques for obtaining a detailed understanding of the negotiation dynamics among the stakeholders. © Proceedings ISCRAM 2004.
Information systems
Requirements engineering
Asynchronous negotiations
Emergency Response Information Systems
Preference models
Software requirements
Stakeholder preferences
Emergency services
exported from refbase (http://idl.iscram.org/show.php?record=87), last updated on Sun, 09 Aug 2015 06:04:29 +0200
text
http://idl.iscram.org/files/campbell/2004/87_Campbell_etal2004.pdf
CatherineLowryCampbell_etal2004
Proceedings of ISCRAM 2004 – 1st International Workshop on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management
ISCRAM 2004
B. Van de Walle
B
Carle
editor
1st International ISCRAM Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management
2004
Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium
Brussels
conference publication
121
126
9076971080
2411-3387
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