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Cognitive processes in engineering design: a longitudinal study

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Cognitive processes in engineering design: a longitudinal study. / BALL, L J ; EVANS, J S T ; DENNIS, I .
In: Ergonomics, Vol. 37, No. 11, 11.1994, p. 1753-1786.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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BALL, LJ, EVANS, JST & DENNIS, I 1994, 'Cognitive processes in engineering design: a longitudinal study', Ergonomics, vol. 37, no. 11, pp. 1753-1786. https://doi.org/10.1080/00140139408964950

APA

Vancouver

BALL LJ, EVANS JST, DENNIS I. Cognitive processes in engineering design: a longitudinal study. Ergonomics. 1994 Nov;37(11):1753-1786. doi: 10.1080/00140139408964950

Author

BALL, L J ; EVANS, J S T ; DENNIS, I . / Cognitive processes in engineering design : a longitudinal study. In: Ergonomics. 1994 ; Vol. 37, No. 11. pp. 1753-1786.

Bibtex

@article{9fd03c9d741d40c292208a47b6fb6dd4,
title = "Cognitive processes in engineering design: a longitudinal study",
abstract = "In this paper we report an empirical study of the cognitive processes of semi-expert electronics engineers pursuing real-world design projects. Extensive diary and interview data were analysed so as to reveal the organization of on-going design activity and the goals that were motivating behaviour. Our analyses indicated that subjects were implementing a highly systematic design strategy which deviated only a small amount (12%) from a top-down, depth-first procedure. Some of this deviation could be accounted for by social demands impinging on the individual designer, and whilst there was also evidence of 'opportunistic' deviation from a structured design approach, this did not appear to be a significant feature of our subjects' behaviour. We present a model of the design process as a set of production rules which describe an abstract 'design schema' for electronic engineering. This design schema embodies processes which control and co-ordinate problem-understanding and problem-structuring activity as well as the essentially top-down, depth-first pursuit of design solutions. The schema also allows for flexibility in the design process, permitting subjects to cope with contingencies arising through social influences and performance breakdowns. A further aspect of the design schema is that it encapsulates a 'satisficing' procedure which reflects a principle that dominated our engineers' solution-search and evaluation activity - they characteristically focused exclusively on initial, satisfactory (but usually sub-optimal) solution concepts rather than comparing alternatives with the aim of optimizing choices. We conclude our discussion by recommending facilities that we feel computer-based design aids should offer users if they are to be genuinely useful adjuncts to design activity.",
keywords = "ENGINEERING DESIGN, COGNITIVE PROCESSES, PSYCHOLOGICAL MODEL, COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN",
author = "BALL, {L J} and EVANS, {J S T} and I DENNIS",
year = "1994",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1080/00140139408964950",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "1753--1786",
journal = "Ergonomics",
issn = "0014-0139",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cognitive processes in engineering design

T2 - a longitudinal study

AU - BALL, L J

AU - EVANS, J S T

AU - DENNIS, I

PY - 1994/11

Y1 - 1994/11

N2 - In this paper we report an empirical study of the cognitive processes of semi-expert electronics engineers pursuing real-world design projects. Extensive diary and interview data were analysed so as to reveal the organization of on-going design activity and the goals that were motivating behaviour. Our analyses indicated that subjects were implementing a highly systematic design strategy which deviated only a small amount (12%) from a top-down, depth-first procedure. Some of this deviation could be accounted for by social demands impinging on the individual designer, and whilst there was also evidence of 'opportunistic' deviation from a structured design approach, this did not appear to be a significant feature of our subjects' behaviour. We present a model of the design process as a set of production rules which describe an abstract 'design schema' for electronic engineering. This design schema embodies processes which control and co-ordinate problem-understanding and problem-structuring activity as well as the essentially top-down, depth-first pursuit of design solutions. The schema also allows for flexibility in the design process, permitting subjects to cope with contingencies arising through social influences and performance breakdowns. A further aspect of the design schema is that it encapsulates a 'satisficing' procedure which reflects a principle that dominated our engineers' solution-search and evaluation activity - they characteristically focused exclusively on initial, satisfactory (but usually sub-optimal) solution concepts rather than comparing alternatives with the aim of optimizing choices. We conclude our discussion by recommending facilities that we feel computer-based design aids should offer users if they are to be genuinely useful adjuncts to design activity.

AB - In this paper we report an empirical study of the cognitive processes of semi-expert electronics engineers pursuing real-world design projects. Extensive diary and interview data were analysed so as to reveal the organization of on-going design activity and the goals that were motivating behaviour. Our analyses indicated that subjects were implementing a highly systematic design strategy which deviated only a small amount (12%) from a top-down, depth-first procedure. Some of this deviation could be accounted for by social demands impinging on the individual designer, and whilst there was also evidence of 'opportunistic' deviation from a structured design approach, this did not appear to be a significant feature of our subjects' behaviour. We present a model of the design process as a set of production rules which describe an abstract 'design schema' for electronic engineering. This design schema embodies processes which control and co-ordinate problem-understanding and problem-structuring activity as well as the essentially top-down, depth-first pursuit of design solutions. The schema also allows for flexibility in the design process, permitting subjects to cope with contingencies arising through social influences and performance breakdowns. A further aspect of the design schema is that it encapsulates a 'satisficing' procedure which reflects a principle that dominated our engineers' solution-search and evaluation activity - they characteristically focused exclusively on initial, satisfactory (but usually sub-optimal) solution concepts rather than comparing alternatives with the aim of optimizing choices. We conclude our discussion by recommending facilities that we feel computer-based design aids should offer users if they are to be genuinely useful adjuncts to design activity.

KW - ENGINEERING DESIGN

KW - COGNITIVE PROCESSES

KW - PSYCHOLOGICAL MODEL

KW - COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN

U2 - 10.1080/00140139408964950

DO - 10.1080/00140139408964950

M3 - Journal article

VL - 37

SP - 1753

EP - 1786

JO - Ergonomics

JF - Ergonomics

SN - 0014-0139

IS - 11

ER -