Graphical support adapted to designers for the selection of an optimal solution in Design by Shopping
MINEL, Stephanie
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
ESTIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
ESTIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
MINEL, Stephanie
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
ESTIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
< Reduce
Laboratoire de l'intégration, du matériau au système [IMS]
ESTIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
Language
EN
Communication dans un congrès
This item was published in
Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Engineering Design (ICED15), International Conference on Engineering Design (ICED 15), 2015-07-27, Milan. vol. Design Methods and Tools - part 2, p. 215-224
English Abstract
Design space exploration, that is an embodiment of a paradigm Design by Shopping, refers to the systematic activity of discovery and evaluation of the elements in the design space in order to identify optimal solution by ...Read more >
Design space exploration, that is an embodiment of a paradigm Design by Shopping, refers to the systematic activity of discovery and evaluation of the elements in the design space in order to identify optimal solution by reducing the design space toward an area of performance. This activity is composed of three main phases: the discovery, the optimization and the selection. There are existing tools for the design space exploration with different graphs (ScatterPlot matrix, 2D and 3D scatter plot, parallel coordinates plot, etc.). These graphs are useful for the representation of multidimensional set of data with an unlimited number of alternatives (design points). Obviously, during the selection phase, designers face to a reduced design space with a limited number of design points (in a performance area). Thus, in our work, we try to identify which graph is the most adapted to the selection phase. It emerges, from literature, three graphs useful for the representation of multidimensional set of data (>3 variables) and with a limited number of alternatives (<50). Thus we have designed experimentation composed of 3 scenarios (with 13 design parameters and 5 variables of performance) performed by 30 participants. It results one graph more suited to the selection phase in the Design by Shopping: the Parallel Coordinates Plot.Read less <
English Keywords
visualization
Computer aided design (CAD)
Decision making
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