Dear Balder,
You could kill two birds with one stone here, so to speak, by using the
brief that has been developed by Emily Campbell of the RSA, London for
the Design Thinking Research Symposium [DTRS 2012] that I am organising
here at Northumbria University, School of Design in April 2012 and
submitting the results in a DTRS 2012 paper based on your study.
Details of the call-for-papers are pasted below.
Personally, I always feel specifying the object in advance to be
designed [e.g. a measure cup for the blind, a bike rack, a device for
mounting backpack on bike, etc.] is artificial. You will see that the
brief we have selected for the DTRS 2012 event is open and the designer
or design teams can respond more openly to it.
Hope this helps,
Paul
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-------CALL-FOR-PAPERS--------------------------------------------------
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As a gentle reminder please find below the launch of DTRS9
call-for-papers, which I am sure will be of interest to you and your
colleagues. Please feel free to pass this on to anyone that you think
would be interested.
Design Thinking Research Symposium (DTRS9)
"Articulating Design Thinking"
18 - 20 April, 2012
School of Design, Northumbria University
The Process
Between the 18th and 20th April 2012, the School of Design at
Northumbria University will host the ninth Design Thinking Research
Symposium (DTRS9). The symposium entitled, "Articulating Design
Thinking", will be run along similar (but different) lines to the
workshop-based events that we have seen in past DTRS and related events
such as the "Delft Protocols" in 1994, the DTRS7 event "Analysing Design
Meetings" in London in 2007, and the "Studying Professional Software
Designers" workshop held at the University of California, Irvine in
2010. At these events, workshop delegates were asked to respond to a
given common set of data (i.e. video recordings and transcripts).
DTRS9 at the School of Design, Northumbria University will, however,
make a few changes to the workshop-based format and be run along the
following lines:
* Delegates will be given a generic design brief (attached below),
which nevertheless permits a variety of design and other disciplinary
responses.
* Participants will make their own arrangements for tackling the
brief, and can work either individually or as part of a larger team.
The time you allocate to this activity and the "designed" outcome is
unspecified.
* Once the design brief has been completed, each invited DTRS9
participant is requested to write up the design activity in an academic
paper to be submitted for peer review.
* Participants are responsible for organising their own response
to the design brief, arranging their design team, writing up their
observations, analyses, interpretations and results in their paper.
* Each submitted paper is then double-blind peer reviewed and
assessed for inclusion in the "Articulating Design Thinking" conference
and planned book.
* DTRS9 is particularly keen to include novel and interesting
papers that describe collaborations between industry (i.e. perhaps small
SME-style enterprises, medium size companies or even global players),
design students (i.e. undergraduate or postgraduate), academics and
researchers from design disciplines and other relevant areas, and/or a
combination of all of these.
The Papers
Invited DTRS9 participants should consider concentrating their paper on
topical and relevant design research issues including, but not limited
to, the following:
* Understanding and articulating the design process;
* Design communication;
* Design context;
* Design expertise;
* Design thinking;
* Design behaviour;
* Disciplinarity issues in design;
* Design knowledge;
* Language in design;
* Cross cultural issues in design;
* Co-designing;
* Socio-cultural issues in design;
* and others.
The Timetable
Launch of DTRS9 Call-for-Participation - November 2010
Online Expression of Interest - closes 7th March 2011
Submit Full Paper - 30th May 2011
Final Paper - 24th October 2011
DTRS9 Event - 18th, 19th and 20th April 2012
More information on DTRS9 where you can formally state your expression
of interest in taking part can be found here:
http://www.northumbria.ac.uk/design/dtrs9
<http://www.northumbria.ac.uk/design/dtrs9>
More information on past DTRS events can be found here:
http://design.open.ac.uk/cross/DesignThinkingResearchSymposia.htm
<http://design.open.ac.uk/cross/DesignThinkingResearchSymposia.htm>
The Brief*
"Modern Age"
How can the design of products, spaces, and services make growing old
seem more attractive and inviting?
11% of the world's 6.9 billion people are over 60. By the year 2050
that figure will have doubled to 22%. If we are to support a growing
number of older people we need to produce products, spaces, and services
that allow them to stay healthy and well in and around their own home.
You are asked to design a domestic product, living environment, or
service for older people that surpasses conventional expectations. For
the purpose of illustration only, the following would all be viable
responses to the brief:
* a piece of furniture or furniture system
* a domestic tool, product or appliance
* an architectural intervention
* a decorative item or scheme
* an interior design or living environment
* an adapted bathroom, kitchen or workshop
* a new domestic service
* ...and many others are possible.
*Brief written by Emily Campbell of the Royal Society for the
encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA).
Best,
Paul
Professor Paul Rodgers
Northumbria University : School of Design City Campus East : Newcastle
upon Tyne
NE1 8ST : UNITED KINGDOM
m : +44 (0)778 718 2119
t : +44 (0)191 227 4111
f : +44 (0)191 227 4655
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-------CALL-FOR-PAPERS
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-----Original Message-----
From: PhD-Design - This list is for discussion of PhD studies and
related research in Design [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf
Of Balder Onarheim
Sent: 21 January 2011 02:18
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Short (product) design task for study on creativity
Dear list,
I'm writing a PhD about the relationship between creativity and
constraints (any references on that topic is of course highly
appreciated!), and I'm now in the phase of developing pilot studies
with students and professional designers.
In the study I'll have teams of two designers working 90 minutes with
producing a design solution for a given (product) design problem. The
challenging part is to find a good design task that is possible to
"solve" in about an hour, without giving too many constraints, and
that most people will have relevant background knowledge to work with.
I've considered classical experimental tasks like the measure cup for
blind users, bike rack, device for mounting backpack on bike,
automated cloak-room and spill proof cup, but if anyone on this list
have experiences with using other tasks please let me know!
Thanks a lot,
Balder Onarheim
//////////////////////////////////////
Industrial Designer
PhD Fellow
www.onarheim.com
Copenhagen Business School
Department of Marketing
Solbjerg Plads 3C, 3rd floor
DK-2000 Frederiksberg C
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+45 50 373 555
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