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  2. Traceability matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traceability_matrix

    [1]: 3–22 It is often used with high-level requirements (these often consist of marketing requirements) and detailed requirements of the product to the matching parts of high-level design, detailed design, test plan, and test cases. A requirements traceability matrix may be used to check if the current project requirements are being met, and ...

  3. Traceability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traceability

    Within a product's supply chain, traceability may be both a regulatory and an ethical or environmental issue. [3] Traceability is increasingly becoming a core criterion for sustainability efforts related to supply chains wherein knowing the producer, workers and other links stands as a necessary factor that underlies credible claims of social, economic, or environmental impacts. [4]

  4. Requirements traceability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requirements_traceability

    Requirements traceability is a sub-discipline of requirements management within software development and systems engineering.Traceability as a general term is defined by the IEEE Systems and Software Engineering Vocabulary [1] as (1) the degree to which a relationship can be established between two or more products of the development process, especially products having a predecessor-successor ...

  5. Certified reference materials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certified_reference_materials

    Certified reference materials (CRMs) are 'controls' or standards used to check the quality and metrological traceability of products, to validate analytical measurement methods, or for the calibration of instruments. [1] A certified reference material is a particular form of measurement standard.

  6. Track and trace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Track_and_trace

    An example of a generic RFID chip. Some produce traceability makers use matrix barcodes to record data on specific produce. The international standards organization EPCglobal under GS1 has ratified the EPC network standards (esp. the EPC information services EPCIS standard) which codify the syntax and semantics for supply chain events and the secure method for selectively sharing supply chain ...

  7. Requirements engineering tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requirements_engineering_tools

    The PMI guide Requirements Management: A Practical Guide recommends that a requirements tool should be identified at the beginning of the project, as [requirements] traceability can get complex and that switching tool mid-term could present a challenge. [3] According to ISO/IEC TR 24766:2009, [4] six major tool capabilities exist:

  8. Requirements management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requirements_management

    Requirements traceability is concerned with documenting the life of a requirement. [4] It should be possible to trace back to the origin of each requirement and every change made to the requirement should therefore be documented in order to achieve traceability. [5]

  9. Metrology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrology

    Metrology traceability pyramid. Metrological traceability is defined as the "property of a measurement result whereby the result can be related to a reference through a documented unbroken chain of calibrations, each contributing to the measurement uncertainty". [33]