2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.destud.2009.04.002
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Transforming shape in design: observations from studies of sketching

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Cited by 84 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…As they are more closer related with the individual meaning we interpret from the objects and emotions we get from them, the subjective information and subjective concinnity will be studied directly during the experimentation, by focusing on particular stimuli (shapes, colors, textures, sounds…) the emotional and semantic response to them. Practical applications of such evaluations [11] were also a useful source of inspiration for the creation of the experimentation's methodology.…”
Section: Aestheticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As they are more closer related with the individual meaning we interpret from the objects and emotions we get from them, the subjective information and subjective concinnity will be studied directly during the experimentation, by focusing on particular stimuli (shapes, colors, textures, sounds…) the emotional and semantic response to them. Practical applications of such evaluations [11] were also a useful source of inspiration for the creation of the experimentation's methodology.…”
Section: Aestheticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For design processes where visual thinking dominates, shape computations have been shown to provide appropriate formal descriptions that give insight on processes of shape transformations. For example, Prats et al [15] describe how explorative sketching in a design process can be formalised according to shape rules, and Paterson [16] presents a series of studies where shape rules formalise explorative prototyping, including physical modelmaking. In both these works shape computations give formal descriptions of creative design processes, with a focus on the transformation of representations, and this description is then used to analyse the processes, giving insight based on objective external evidence, rather than designers' recollections of their internal thought processes.…”
Section: Formalising Materials Aspects Of Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The primary difference lies in composition. When sketching, designers often change composition during exploration of a design concept to accommodate new ways of seeing, and to develop new avenues to explore [4]. Such switches in interpretation during sketching are visually intuitive, but computationally are difficult to achieve.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a distinction between these two types of logic, most notably in the way that compositions arise, because shape computations generate compositions. Shape computations mimic the sketching process, and rules are used to accommodate new ways of seeing and new ways of exploring [4]. As such, application of a rule changes the structure of a shape according to recognised parts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%