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Margaret K. Kulpa, Kent A. Johnson

"Interpreting the CMMI: A Process Improvement Approach, Second Edition"


Indirect Artifacts Artifacts that are a consequence of
performing a speci?¬?c or generic practice
or that substantiate its implementation, but
which are not the purpose for which the
practice is performed. This indicator type
is especially useful when there may be
doubts about whether the intent of the
practice has been met (e.g., an artifact
exists but there is no indication of where it
came from, who worked to develop it, or
how it is used).
A?¬?rmations
table 22.1 Practice implementation indicator types
Those Damn PIIDs! n 325
summary of only the most pertinent and most relevant information mapping to
specific and generic practices.
What do the Piids look like?
Each PIID begins with the title of the process area. You will then see rows that display
the Goal, the associated (specific) practice, and the type if evidence requested
(Direct Artifact, Indirect Artifact, or Affi rmation). You will see that one row has
the phrase ???Example Evidence (Look Fors/Listen Fors)??? in it. These examples are
based on the Typical Work Products in the CMMI.


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