Publication | Closed Access
Reasoning about Human Intention Change for Individualized Runtime Software Service Evolution
12
Citations
23
References
2010
Year
Unknown Venue
Software MaintenanceEngineeringSoftware EngineeringKnowledge-based ReasoningSemanticsSemantic WebSoftware AnalysisEmpirical Software Engineering ResearchSoftware AspectSoftware Service EvolutionSitu FrameworkHuman Intention ChangeService-oriented Software EngineeringUser ExperienceComputer ScienceSoftware DesignSoftware EvolutionService-oriented ComputingProgram AnalysisAutomated ReasoningSoftware TestingHuman-ai InteractionSystem Software
While software evolution has been studied extensively in software engineering, few of these efforts have involved a systematic exploration of human epistemological attitudes, such as human desire and intention, as the driving force of software service evolution. Our work proposes a theoretical framework to monitor and reason about human intention and its changes, which in turn can be used to determine how software and services should evolve to be individualized and better serve each user. Extending the Situ framework, we explore the service satisfiability problem through sub-world coverage following Kripke semantics, which enjoys wide application in AI and other fields related to human epistemic reasoning.
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