ENASE 2013

Scope

ENASE provides a yearly forum for researchers and practitioners to review and evaluate emerging as well as established SE methods, practices, architectures, technologies and tools. An important underpinning and assumption of ENASE is that in software engineering "novel" turns out frequently to be just new hype. An objective of ENASE is to reveal any such hype as soon as feasible. This means that ENASE does not exclude more traditional approaches to software development and integration. On the contrary, ENASE endeavors to compare novel with traditional, also to discover if novel is not just traditional in disguise. Consequently, ENASE accepts also papers concentrating on a critique of more traditional and entrenched SE approaches. Against that background, ENASE undertakes to provide fast but careful scientific and empirical evaluation of new as well as more established approaches to software engineering. Of particular interest are experience reports and evaluations (qualitative and quantitative) of existing approaches as well as new ideas and proposals for improvements. The conference solicits experiments, case studies, surveys, meta-analyses, empirical studies, systematic reviews, conceptual explorations, innovative ideas, critical appraisals, etc. related to the following topics list:

Conference Topics

Service-Oriented Architectures Design Thinking as a Paradigm for Software Development Enterprise Integration Strategies and Patterns Software Process Improvement Model-driven Engineering Knowledge Management and Engineering Architectural Design and Meta Architectures Requirements Engineering Frameworks and Models Business Process Management, Engineering and Reengineering Process-centric Paradigms Application Integration Technologies e-Business Technologies Collaborative Requirements Management Systems Business and Software Modeling Languages Software Quality Management Software Change and Configuration Management Geographically Distributed Software Development Environments Formal Methods Meta Programming Systems and Meta-modeling Cross-feeding Between Data and Software Engineering "3A" (Agile, Aspect-oriented and Agent-oriented) Software Engineering Component-based Software Engineering and Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) Systems Service-oriented Software Engineering and Management Software and Systems Development Methodologies Service Science