Boundary objects and their use in agile systems engineering
Journal article, 2019

Agile methods are increasingly introduced in automotive companies in the attempt to become more efficient and flexible in the system development. The adoption of agile practices influences communication between stakeholders and makes companies rethink the management of artifacts and documentation like requirements, safety compliance documents, and architecture models. Practitioners aim to reduce irrelevant documentation but face a lack of guidance to determine what artifacts are needed and how they should be managed. This paper presents artifacts, challenges, guidelines, and practices for the continuous management of systems engineering artifacts in automotive based on a theoretical and empirical understanding of the topic. In collaboration with 53 practitioners from six automotive companies, we conducted a design-science study involving interviews, a questionnaire, focus groups, and practical data analysis of a systems engineering tool. The guidelines suggest the distinction between artifacts that are shared among different actors in a company (boundary objects) and those that are used within a team (locally relevant artifacts). We propose an analysis approach to identify boundary objects and three practices to manage systems engineering artifacts in industry.

boundary objects

agile systems engineering

documentation

design science

Author

Rebekka Wohlrab

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Software Engineering (Chalmers)

Patrizio Pelliccione

University of Gothenburg

Eric Knauss

University of Gothenburg

Mats Larsson

Systemite AB

Journal of Software: Evolution and Process

2047-7481 (eISSN)

Vol. 31 5 e2166

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Software Engineering

Information Systemes, Social aspects

DOI

10.1002/smr.2166

More information

Latest update

8/12/2019