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Drifting by Intention [electronic resource] : Four Epistemic Traditions from within Constructive Design Research / by Peter Gall Krogh, Ilpo Koskinen.

By: Krogh, Peter Gall [author.].
Contributor(s): Koskinen, Ilpo [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Design Research Foundations: Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2020Edition: 1st ed. 2020.Description: XIII, 146 p. 32 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783030378967.Subject(s): Industrial design | Technology—Philosophy | Engineering design | Graphic arts | Industrial Design | Philosophy of Technology | Engineering Design | Graphic DesignAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 745.2 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Chapter 1. Drifting by intention in design research -- Chapter 2. The shift to knowledge -- Chapter 3. Drifting and knowledge -- Chapter 4. Accountability, reseach and practice -- Chapter 5. From analysis to concept -- Chapter 6. Ways of drifting in design experiments -- Chapter 7. Drifting and evaluation -- Chapter 8. Conceptual scaffoldings -- Chapter 9. New experimentalism in design research -- Chapter 10. Drifting at the frontiers of knowledge.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: Constructive design research, is an exploratory endeavor building exemplars, arguments, and evidence. In this monograph, it is shown how acts of designing builds relevance and articulates knowledge in combination. Using design acts to build new knowledge, invite reframing of questions and new perceptions to build up. Respecting the emergence of new knowledge in the process invite change of cause and action. The authors' term for this change is drifting; designers drift; and they drift intentionally, knowing what they do. The book details how drifting is a methodic practice of its own and provides examples of how and where it happens. This volume explores how to do it effectively, and how it depends on the concept of knowledge. The authors identify four epistemic traditions in constructive design research. By introducing a Knowledge/Relevance model they clarify how design experiments create knowledge and what kinds of challenges and contributions designers face when drifting. Along the lines of experimental design work the authors identify five main ways in which constructive experiments drift. Only one of them borrows its practices from experimental science, others build on precedents including arts and craft practices. As the book reveals, constructive design research builds on a rich body of research that finds its origins in some of the most important intellectual movements of 20th century. This background further expands constructive design research from a scientific model towards a more welcoming understanding of research and knowledge. This monograph provides novel actionable models for steering and navigating processes of constructive design research. It helps skill the design researcher in participating in the general language games of research and helps the design researcher build research relations beyond the discipline.
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Chapter 1. Drifting by intention in design research -- Chapter 2. The shift to knowledge -- Chapter 3. Drifting and knowledge -- Chapter 4. Accountability, reseach and practice -- Chapter 5. From analysis to concept -- Chapter 6. Ways of drifting in design experiments -- Chapter 7. Drifting and evaluation -- Chapter 8. Conceptual scaffoldings -- Chapter 9. New experimentalism in design research -- Chapter 10. Drifting at the frontiers of knowledge.

Constructive design research, is an exploratory endeavor building exemplars, arguments, and evidence. In this monograph, it is shown how acts of designing builds relevance and articulates knowledge in combination. Using design acts to build new knowledge, invite reframing of questions and new perceptions to build up. Respecting the emergence of new knowledge in the process invite change of cause and action. The authors' term for this change is drifting; designers drift; and they drift intentionally, knowing what they do. The book details how drifting is a methodic practice of its own and provides examples of how and where it happens. This volume explores how to do it effectively, and how it depends on the concept of knowledge. The authors identify four epistemic traditions in constructive design research. By introducing a Knowledge/Relevance model they clarify how design experiments create knowledge and what kinds of challenges and contributions designers face when drifting. Along the lines of experimental design work the authors identify five main ways in which constructive experiments drift. Only one of them borrows its practices from experimental science, others build on precedents including arts and craft practices. As the book reveals, constructive design research builds on a rich body of research that finds its origins in some of the most important intellectual movements of 20th century. This background further expands constructive design research from a scientific model towards a more welcoming understanding of research and knowledge. This monograph provides novel actionable models for steering and navigating processes of constructive design research. It helps skill the design researcher in participating in the general language games of research and helps the design researcher build research relations beyond the discipline.

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