The London Charter and the Seville Principles as sources of requirements for e-archaeology systems development purposes

Authors

  • Juan M. Carrillo Gea Universidad de Murcia
  • Ambrosio Toval Universidad de Murcia
  • José L. Fernández Alemán Universidad de Murcia
  • Joaquín Nicolás Universidad de Murcia
  • Mariano Flores Gutiérrez Universidad de Murcia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4995/var.2013.4275

Keywords:

E-archaeology systems development, Requirements engineering, Reuse, Standarization

Abstract

Requirements engineering (RE) is a discipline of critical importance in software development. This paper provides a process and a set of software artefacts to help in the production of e-archaeology systems with emphasis on requirements reuse and standards. In particular, two important guidelines in the field of earchaeology, the London Charter and the Principles of Seville, have been shown as two sources of requirements to be considered as a starting point for developing this type of systems.

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Author Biographies

Juan M. Carrillo Gea, Universidad de Murcia

Software Engineering Research Group, Departamento de Informática y Sistemas de la
Universidad de Murcia. España.

Ambrosio Toval, Universidad de Murcia

Software Engineering Research Group, Departamento de Informática y Sistemas de la
Universidad de Murcia. España.

José L. Fernández Alemán, Universidad de Murcia

Software Engineering Research Group, Departamento de Informática y Sistemas de la
Universidad de Murcia. España.

Joaquín Nicolás, Universidad de Murcia

Software Engineering Research Group, Departamento de Informática y Sistemas de la
Universidad de Murcia. España.

Mariano Flores Gutiérrez, Universidad de Murcia

Software Engineering Research Group, Departamento de Informática y Sistemas de la
Universidad de Murcia. España.

References

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Published

2013-11-05

How to Cite

Carrillo Gea, J. M., Toval, A., Fernández Alemán, J. L., Nicolás, J., & Flores Gutiérrez, M. (2013). The London Charter and the Seville Principles as sources of requirements for e-archaeology systems development purposes. Virtual Archaeology Review, 4(9), 205–211. https://doi.org/10.4995/var.2013.4275

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Section

Articles