=Paper= {{Paper |id=Vol-2584/preface |storemode=property |title=None |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2584/preface.pdf |volume=Vol-2584 }} ==None== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2584/preface.pdf
REFSQ 2020: Joint Proceedings of Workshops, Doctoral
Symposium, Live Studies, and Posters and Tools Track

                       Mehrdad Sabetzadeh                          Andreas Vogelsang
                       University of Ottawa                   Technische Universiät Berlin
                         Ottawa, Canada                             Berlin, Germany
                       msabetza@uottawa.ca                   andreas.vogelsang@tu-berlin.de




1     Preface
The 26th International Conference on Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality was supposed
to take place from March 24th to March 27th, 2020 in Pisa, Italy. Unfortunately, the conference had to be
postponed due to the worldwide outbreak of the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19). The proceedings of the main
conference as well as the satellite events were published in March 2020 as planned.
   REFSQ Working Conferences aim at providing a forum for new and innovative ideas and approaches to
successful Requirements Engineering (RE) and for exchange between researchers and practitioners. The special
theme of REFSQ’20 is “RE and Cyber-Physical Systems” to emphasize the role that RE can play in the design
of the next generation of systems where people, and physical and software components interact in many different
ways. The REFSQ conferences also have a tradition of hosting associated events, where participants are able to
focus on emerging topics of RE as the foundation of software quality. The co-located events kept also in mind
the special theme of the conference.
   On the workshop day, March 24th, three workshops and the doctoral symposium were organized, whereas
the live studies and posters and tools track session took place during the remaining conference days. The three
workshops at REFSQ’20 were carefully selected based on their quality, attractiveness, and their potential to
attract attendants. This led to the following workshops:

    • NLP4RE: 3rd Workshop on Natural Language Processing for Requirements Engineering (organized by Sal-
      lam Abualhaija, Davide Fucci, Fabiano Dalpiaz, and Xavier Franch): Natural language processing (NLP)
      has played an important role in several computer science areas and requirements engineering (RE) is not an
      exception. In the last years, the advent of massive and very heterogeneous natural language (NL) RErele-
      vant sources, like tweets and app reviews, has attracted even more interest from the RE community. The
      main goal of the NLP4RE workshop is to set up a regular meeting point for the researchers on NLP tech-
      nologies in RE in which the advances, challenges, and barriers that they encounter may be communicated,
      and collaborations may emerge naturally.

    • CreaRE: 9th International Workshop on Creativity in Requirements Engineering (organized by Andrea
      Herrmann, Maya Daneva, and Eduard Groen): The CreaRE workshop brings together RE practitioners and
      researchers who are interested in discussing the role of creativity in RE, the array of creativity techniques that
      can be applied to RE, and the ways in which creativity techniques from other disciplines can be leveraged
      in RE. It also aims at raising awareness in the RE community of the importance of creativity techniques,
      and creative elements in RE and development processes.

   Copyright c 2020 for this paper by its authors. Use permitted under Creative Commons License Attribution 4.0 International
(CC BY 4.0).
   In: M. Sabetzadeh, A. Vogelsang, S. Abualhaija, M. Borg, F. Dalpiaz, M. Daneva, N. Fernández, X. Franch, D. Fucci, V.
Gervasi, E. Groen, R. Guizzardi, A. Herrmann, J. Horkoff, L. Mich, A. Perini, A. Susi (eds.): Joint Proceedings of REFSQ-2020
Workshops, Doctoral Symposium, Live Studies Track, and Poster Track, Pisa, Italy, 24-03-2020, published at http://ceur-ws.org
  • RE4AI: 1st International Workshop on Requirements Engineering for Artificial Intelligence (organized by
    Renata Guizzardi, Jennifer Horkoff, Anna Perini and Angelo Susi): Nowadays AI is embedded in software
    and hardware systems, from everyday objects, such as cars, household appliances, wearable devices, to un-
    manned military vehicles and arms. Since several years ago, AI researchers have manifested their worries and
    recommendations for the responsible use of data, employment of discrimination-free algorithms, alignment
    of AI-based systems and technologies with human values and transparency. However, it is hard to imagine
    that AI systems will achieve these attributes without accounting for a strong emphasis on capturing and
    maintaining “the right” requirements, and making sure that the system is validated to properly meet such
    requirements. The main goals of the RE4AI workshop include raising awareness in the RE community about
    the importance of RE in realizing Trustworthy AI systems; bringing in the same room people from AI and
    RE industry and academia to discuss pressing issues, such as how RE can contribute to prevent AI systems
    to fail or to go rogue; setting up the basis for collaboratively producing a report on the challenges, candidate
    solution paths, and research priorities regarding RE4AI; and motivating cross fertilization between AI and
    RE works.

  These proceedings contain also the content of the following tracks:

REFSQ’20 Doctoral Symposium The goals of the Doctoral Symposium (organized by Maya Daneva and
   Vincenzo Gervasi) is to provide PhD students with an opportunity to present and discuss their work in
   early as well as advanced stages of their doctoral research, to provide all participant students with advice
   and suggestions from a panel of senior researchers, and to facilitate interaction among all the participants.

Live Studies The main goal of the Live Studies (organized by Nelly C. Fernández and Luisa Mich) is to
    stimulate discussion on how to assess state-of-art, how to generalize from empirical studies, and how to set
    up longitudinal studies.
Posters and Tools Track The Posters and Tools Track (organized by Markus Borg and Eduard C. Groen) is
   a forum to present posters and demonstrate tools covering any aspect of RE. It gives researchers the chance
   to present their most recent work and obtain early feedback on ongoing research.

   We would like to thank all Workshop, Doctoral Symposium, Live Studies Track, and Posters and Tools Track
Chairs as well as their Program Committees for their diligence in selecting the papers and ensuring their high
scientific quality.