ABSTRACT

In this dynamic review and synthesis of empirical research and theoretical discussion of design as cognitive activity, Willemien Visser reconciles and integrates the classical view of design, as conceptualized by Herbert Simon's symbolic information processing approach, with modern views of design such as the situativity approach, as formulated by Donald Schon. The author goes on to develop her own view on design, in which design is most appropriately characterized as a construction of representations. She lays the groundwork for the integration of design research and cognitive science. This seemingly simple framework has implications that set the stage for this mutually beneficial integration.

part I|42 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|6 pages

Focus of This Book

chapter 2|2 pages

Public Addressed

chapter 3|3 pages

Some Historical Pointers

chapter 4|16 pages

Preliminary Terminological Issues

chapter 5|11 pages

Models of Design

chapter 6|2 pages

Our Empirical Design Studies at a Glance

part II|36 pages

The Classical View on Design. The Symbolic Information Processing (SIP) Approach

part Ill|19 pages

Modern Views on Design. The Situativity Approach (SIT)

chapter 11|5 pages

Early SIT-Inspired Research

chapter 12|4 pages

Current SIT-Inspired Research

part IV|13 pages

Confronting Classical and Modern Views on Design

part V|104 pages

Design as Construction of Representations

part VI|9 pages

Conclusion