Volume 7: 30th International Conference on Design Theory and Methodology 2018
DOI: 10.1115/detc2018-85747
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The Economies and Dimensionality of Prototyping: Value, Time, Cost and Fidelity

Abstract: Economic use of early stage prototyping is of paramount importance to companies engaged in the development of innovative products, services and systems because it directly impacts their bottom-line [1, 2]. There is likewise a need to understand the dimensions and lenses that make up an economic profile of prototypes. Yet, there is no reliable understanding of how resources expended and views of dimensionality across prototyping translate into value [3, 4]. To help practitioners, designers, and researchers leve… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Because this study utilizes student population and a shortrun decision-making process, more empirical evidence is required to establish the generalizability of the results to engineers as designers and long-term design processes. Future descriptive modeling efforts need to account for context-dependent design situations, where decision strategies depend on the availability of problem-specific information or the lack thereof [44], an acceptable quantification of predictive uncertainty is absent [45], and the mapping between resources expended and the value of prototypes created varies across disciplines and knowledge domains [46]. Such design situations should include multiple objectives and/or multidimensional design parameters.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because this study utilizes student population and a shortrun decision-making process, more empirical evidence is required to establish the generalizability of the results to engineers as designers and long-term design processes. Future descriptive modeling efforts need to account for context-dependent design situations, where decision strategies depend on the availability of problem-specific information or the lack thereof [44], an acceptable quantification of predictive uncertainty is absent [45], and the mapping between resources expended and the value of prototypes created varies across disciplines and knowledge domains [46]. Such design situations should include multiple objectives and/or multidimensional design parameters.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Designing low fidelity prototype known as low-tech, is a simple and easy translation of the product and design concepts. It's used to turn the design ideas into testable and tangible artifacts, collecting and analyzing the user demands at the early stage [29]. It involves :…”
Section: Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…See Figure 3 Designing high fidelity prototype to help users to look and feel how the application interface will be. Prototypes help in examining design problems and evaluating solutions [29].…”
Section: Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is the basis from which the design ideas are transformed into testable and tangible things. Such a prototype enables the user's requirements to be collected and analyzed early on in the project's development (Tiong et al, 2018).…”
Section: Designing Low Fidelity Prototypementioning
confidence: 99%
“…High-fidelity prototypes give users an indication of what the final interface product will look and feel. Prototypes help to identify problems and their potential solutions (Tiong et al, 2018).…”
Section: Designing High Fidelity Prototypementioning
confidence: 99%