Dissection Versus Incubation: The Within-Subject Effects of Product Dissection Activities on Design Variety

Author:

Starkey Elizabeth M.1,Alzayed Mohammad Alsager2,Hunter Samuel3,Miller Scarlett R.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Engineering Design Technology and Professional Programs, The Pennsylvania State University, 213 Hammond Building, University Park, PA 16802

2. Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, 343 Leonhard Building, University Park, PA 16802

3. Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, 141 Moore Building, University Park, PA 16802

4. School of Engineering Design Technology and Professional Programs; Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, 213-P Hammond Building, University Park, PA 16802

Abstract

Abstract Product dissection is a popular educational tool in engineering design due to its ability to help students understand a product, provide inspiration for new design ideas, and aid in product redesign. While prior research has investigated how dissecting a product before idea generation impacts the creative output of the ideation session, these studies failed to look at the types of ideas generated before dissection or how the type of product dissected impacts this. Thus, the goal of the current study was to examine how product dissection impacts the solution space explored by students. Fifty-five undergraduate engineering students participated in the experiment; 40 participants virtually dissected a product, while the remaining 15 completed a personality test. The results of the study highlight that students explored new types of ideas during the second ideation session for all conditions and at all levels, with students having the biggest increase in embodiment variety when they dissected analogically far products. Overall, there were no differences in design variety between students in the dissection condition and the incubation condition. This study highlights how incubation can impact design variety and calls for further investigation of the interaction between product dissection and incubation.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design,Computer Science Applications,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials

Reference76 articles.

1. Giges, N. S. , 2014, “Changes Afoot in Engineering Education,” ASME.org, https://www.asme.org/career-education/articles/undergraduate-students/changes-afoot-in-engineering-education. Accessed Jan. 5, 2018.

2. A Competence-Based Approach to Sustainable Innovation Teaching: Experiences Within a New Engineering Program;McAloone;ASME J. Mech. Des.,2007

3. The Standard Definition of Creativity;Runco;Creat. Res. J.,2012

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