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The Psychology of designer style

Dillon, Andrew and Sweeney, Marian and Herring, Val and John, Phil and Fallon, Enda (1988) The Psychology of designer style. In Proceedings Alvey Conference, pages pp. 323-327.

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Abstract

This item is not the definitive copy. Please use the following citation when referencing this material: Dillon, A., Sweeney, M., Herring, V., John, P. and Fallon, E. (1988) The psychology of designer style. The Alvey Conference 1988. DTI/IED Publications, 323-327. 1. INTRODUCTION: Underlying the notion of style is a basic premise that all designers are not the same and that the manner in which any designer tackles a problem and proposes a solution may be qualitatively different from other designers. If this is shown to be the case and the concept of designer style can be meaningfully discussed then any model of the process of design should allow for such variation at the level of the group or individual. This basically describes the starting point of the HUSAT team's investigation of the concept.

EPrint Type:Conference Paper
Subjects:Cognitive Science
Psychology
Human Computer Interaction
Hypertext and Hypermedia
ID Code:1292
Deposited On:04 August 2006
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Hayes-Roth, B. (1983) The blackboard architecture: a general framework for problem-solving? HPP Report No. HPP-83-30. Stanford University, Dept. of Computer Science.

Nii, H.P. (1986) Blackboard Systems: The blackboard model of problem solving and the evolution of blackboard architectures AI Magazine, Summer, 38-53.

Whitefield, A. (1986) A model of the engineering design process based on the Hearsay II Balckboard model. Unpublished PhD thesis. University College London.

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