Normative Requirements Operationalization with Large Language Models

April 18, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference

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Authors Nick Feng, Lina Marsso, S. Getir Yaman, Isobel Standen, Yesugen Baatartogtokh, Reem Ayad, VictΓ³ria Oldemburgo de Mello, Bev Townsend, Hanne Bartels, Ana Cavalcanti, Radu Calinescu, Marsha Chechik arXiv ID 2404.12335 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 18 Venue IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Normative non-functional requirements specify constraints that a system must observe in order to avoid violations of social, legal, ethical, empathetic, and cultural norms. As these requirements are typically defined by non-technical system stakeholders with different expertise and priorities (ethicists, lawyers, social scientists, etc.), ensuring their well-formedness and consistency is very challenging. Recent research has tackled this challenge using a domain-specific language to specify normative requirements as rules whose consistency can then be analysed with formal methods. In this paper, we propose a complementary approach that uses Large Language Models to extract semantic relationships between abstract representations of system capabilities. These relations, which are often assumed implicitly by non-technical stakeholders (e.g., based on common sense or domain knowledge), are then used to enrich the automated reasoning techniques for eliciting and analyzing the consistency of normative requirements. We show the effectiveness of our approach to normative requirements elicitation and operationalization through a range of real-world case studies.
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