English

Defining Utility Functions for Multi-Stakeholder Self-Adaptive Systems

Software Engineering 2021-03-19 v1

Abstract

[Context and motivation:] For realistic self-adaptive systems, multiple quality attributes need to be considered and traded off against each other. These quality attributes are commonly encoded in a utility function, for instance, a weighted sum of relevant objectives. [Question/problem:] The research agenda for requirements engineering for self-adaptive systems has raised the need for decision-making techniques that consider the trade-offs and priorities of multiple objectives. Human stakeholders need to be engaged in the decision-making process so that the relative importance of each objective can be correctly elicited. [Principal ideas/results:] This research preview paper presents a method that supports multiple stakeholders in prioritizing relevant quality attributes, negotiating priorities to reach an agreement, and giving input to define utility functions for self-adaptive systems. [Contribution:] The proposed method constitutes a lightweight solution for utility function definition. It can be applied by practitioners and researchers who aim to develop self-adaptive systems that meet stakeholders' requirements. We present details of our plan to study the application of our method using a case study.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2103.10101,
  title  = {Defining Utility Functions for Multi-Stakeholder Self-Adaptive Systems},
  author = {Rebekka Wohlrab and David Garlan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.10101},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

REFSQ 2021: Requirements Engineering: Foundation for Software Quality

R2 v1 2026-06-24T00:18:24.255Z