@article { ISI:000372921700003, title = {Co-located and distributed natural-language requirements specification: traditional versus reuse-based techniques}, journal = {JOURNAL OF SOFTWARE-EVOLUTION AND PROCESS}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, year = {2016}, month = {MAR}, pages = {205-227}, abstract = {{Requirements Engineering (RE) includes processes intended to elicit, analyse, specify and validate systems and software requirements throughout the software life cycle. Mastering the principles of RE is key to achieving the goals of better, cheaper and quicker systems and software development projects. It is also important to be prepared to work with remote teammates, as distributed and global projects are becoming more common. This paper presents an experiment with a total of 31 students from two universities in Spain and Morocco who were assigned to either a co-located or a distributed team. Both traditional and reuse-based requirements specification techniques were applied by the participants to produce requirements documents. Their outcomes were then analysed, and the approaches were compared from the point of view of their effect on a set of performance-based and perception-based variables in co-located and distributed settings. We found significant differences in only productivity (Z=-2.320}, issn = {2047-7473}, doi = {10.1002/smr.1772}, author = {Carrillo de Gea, Juan M. and Nicolas, Joaquin and Fernandez Aleman, Jose L. and Toval, Ambrosio and Ouhbi, Sofia and Idri, Ali} }