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Design and the social sciences : making connections / edited by Jorge Frascara

Contributor(s): Frascara, JorgePublisher: London : Taylor & Francis, 2002Description: xvii, p. 238 : ill charts 24cm001: 8050ISBN: 0415273765Subject(s): Design research | Ergonomics | Product developmentDDC classification: 745.201 FRA
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 745.201 FRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 063760

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The social sciences have a distinctive contribution to make to the understanding and handling of design issues, both in product and systems design and in the design of the built environment. The role of cognitive psychology, particularly ergonomics, to the design process has traditionally been well appreciated. Because it provides important insights into the way people process information cognitively, it is a powerful tool for the design of usable products, buildings and systems.
This book explores the disciplines of social psychology, sociology and anthropology, which provide techniques for investigating the relationships between people and design, in assessing the role that products and the built environment play in peoples lives and in setting product requirements based on this understanding. These include ergonomic user requirements, such as usability and accessibility, and also functional and aesthetic issues which will determine the overall quality of a design in terms of how it is experienced. This means looking at the functional and ergonomic properties of a design and going beyond to issues relating to the fit of the design to the lifestyle and aspirations of those who experience it.
Written by specialists working at the front line in the consumer product industries - as well as by designers and applied theorists - the book describes new ways of understanding product development, innovation and design. Methods for the incorporation of user population in the design process are discussed and notions of use and experience, instead of forms and materials, serve as a basis to present the design of consumer products under a totally new light.

Includes index

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Notes on contributors (p. vii)
  • Preface (p. xv)
  • Acknowledgements (p. xviii)
  • 1 From user-centered to participatory design approaches (p. 1)
  • 2 Human factors for pleasure seekers (p. 9)
  • 3 Communications artifacts: the design of objects and the object of design (p. 24)
  • 4 People-centered design: complexities and uncertainties (p. 33)
  • 5 Social sciences and design innovation (p. 40)
  • 6 Design language: confluence of behavioral, social, and cultural factors (p. 56)
  • 7 Design moves: approximating a desired future with users (p. 66)
  • 8 Emotion and urban experience: implications for design (p. 82)
  • 9 Wayfinding research and design: an interdisciplinary approach in the development of design knowledge and its application (p. 96)
  • 10 Preventing drug interactions in older adults: a collaborative study (p. 102)
  • 11 Fieldnotes from home: anthropology and design on exhibition (p. 125)
  • 12 Research and design collaboration: a case study (p. 135)
  • 13 The technical and the social in engineering education (p. 146)
  • 14 Making connections: design and the social sciences (p. 157)
  • 15 Appearance, form, and the retrieval of prior knowledge (p. 166)
  • 16 The influence of affect on cognitive processes: implications of the informative nature of affect in the area of industrial and product design (p. 178)
  • 17 Gendered spaces of domesticity (p. 194)
  • 18 Social science as a design profession: new visions and relationships (p. 201)
  • 19 Two weddings and still no funeral: sociology, design and the interprofessional project (p. 207)
  • 20 Design and the social sciences (p. 222)
  • 21 Conclusions: design and the social sciences, a reconnaissance (p. 233)
  • Index (p. 235)

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