Hideaki Takeda's Publication
- H. Takeda, A. Tsumaya and T. Tomiyama: Synthesis Thought
Processes in Design, in H. Kals and F. van Houten eds., Integration
of Process Knowledge into Design Support Systems, pp. 249–258, Kluwer
Academic Publishers (1999).
In this paper, we discuss what properties the synthesis process
should have as a thought process and show a tentative synthesis theory.
Instead of universality and minimality for knowledge for analysis, knowledge
for synthesis in design needs physicality, unlikeness, and desirability.
Physicality ensures possibility of existence, while unlikeness and
desirability ensure newness, i.e., unlikeness is for ensuring that an
artifact is different from other existing artifacts, and desirability for
ensuring that it has reason to create newly. Then we show a formalization for
synthesis theory that has the above characteristics. It is based on our
design process theory in which a design process is an iterative logical
process of abduction and deduction on design solution, its properties and
behaviors, and knowledge on objects. Synthesis theory for design is defined
as reconstruction process of design experiences, each of which contains the
logical design process. It consists of three steps, i.e., (1) collecting
design experiences; (2) building a model that includes the collected design
experiences, and (3) minimizing an element that designers want to find
newness.
Hideaki Takeda (National Institute of Informatics)