Multidisciplinary design behaviour using sketching and mental imagery: a literature review and considerations for future research
conference contribution
posted on 2017-09-01, 13:57authored byMia A. Tedjosaputro, Yi-Teng Shih, Patrick Pradel, Chantelle Niblock
The main behavioural characteristics of the early design stage are that
designers move freely between various levels of detail and different cognitive
strategies; this is the central tenet of this research. The interplay between the
role of sketching and mental imagery during the design process is somewhat
mysterious.
It is assumed, but not known, how externalisation assists the imagery
process and vice versa. In an attempt to demystify this interplay, this paper examines
observable behaviour associated with the act of sketching and using mental
imagery. It reviews established protocol analytical methods based on two criteria:
cognitive strategies and ability to be applied in different design domains. Also, it
evaluates the appropriacy of seminal coding schemes for the analysis of mental
imagery to better understand moments of insight (idea generation). It concludes
that established coding schemes are inadequate methods when used to facilitate
analysis of cognitive strategies.
History
School
Design
Published in
5th International Conference on Research into Design
Volume
34
Issue
34
Pages
27 - 37
Citation
TEDJOSAPUTRO, M. ... et al., 2014. Multidisciplinary design behaviour using sketching and mental imagery: a literature review and considerations for future research. IN: Chakrabarti, A. (ed.). Research into Design Across Boundaries. Volume 1, Theory, Research Methodology, Aesthetics, Human Factors and Education. (Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies ; 34.) New Delhi: Springer India. Proceedings of 2015 5th International Conference on Research into Design (ICoRD 15), Bangalore, India, 7-9 January 2015, pp.27-37.
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