The definition of a comprehensive initial set of engineering requirements is crucial to an eective and successful design process. To support engineering designers in this non-trivial task, well-acknowledged requirement checklists are available in literature, but their actual support is arguable. Indeed, engineering design tasks involve multifunctional systems, characterized by a complex map of requirements aecting dierent functions. Aiming at improving the support provided by common checklists, this paper proposes a structured tool capable of allocating dierent requirements to specific functions, and to discern between design wishes and demands. A first experiment of the tool enabled the extraction of useful information for future developments targeting the enhancement of the tool’s ecacy. Indeed, although some advantages have been observed in terms of the number of proposed requirements, the presence of multiple functions led users (engineering students in this work) to useless repetitions of the same requirement. In addition, the use of the proposed tool resulted in increased perceived eort, which has been measured through the NASA Task Load Index method. These limitations constitute the starting point for planning future research and the mentioned enhancements, beyond representing a warning for scholars involved in systematizing the extraction and management of design requirements. Moreover, thanks to the robustness of the scientific approach used in this work, similar experiments can be repeated to obtain data with a more general validity, especially from industry.

Testing a New Structured Tool for Supporting Requirements’ Formulation and Decomposition / Lorenzo Fiorineschi, Niccolò Becattini, Yuri Borgianni, Federico Rotini. - In: APPLIED SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-3417. - ELETTRONICO. - 10:(2020), pp. 1-22. [10.3390/app10093259]

Testing a New Structured Tool for Supporting Requirements’ Formulation and Decomposition

Lorenzo Fiorineschi;Federico Rotini
2020

Abstract

The definition of a comprehensive initial set of engineering requirements is crucial to an eective and successful design process. To support engineering designers in this non-trivial task, well-acknowledged requirement checklists are available in literature, but their actual support is arguable. Indeed, engineering design tasks involve multifunctional systems, characterized by a complex map of requirements aecting dierent functions. Aiming at improving the support provided by common checklists, this paper proposes a structured tool capable of allocating dierent requirements to specific functions, and to discern between design wishes and demands. A first experiment of the tool enabled the extraction of useful information for future developments targeting the enhancement of the tool’s ecacy. Indeed, although some advantages have been observed in terms of the number of proposed requirements, the presence of multiple functions led users (engineering students in this work) to useless repetitions of the same requirement. In addition, the use of the proposed tool resulted in increased perceived eort, which has been measured through the NASA Task Load Index method. These limitations constitute the starting point for planning future research and the mentioned enhancements, beyond representing a warning for scholars involved in systematizing the extraction and management of design requirements. Moreover, thanks to the robustness of the scientific approach used in this work, similar experiments can be repeated to obtain data with a more general validity, especially from industry.
2020
10
1
22
Goal 9: Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure
Lorenzo Fiorineschi, Niccolò Becattini, Yuri Borgianni, Federico Rotini
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1191754
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