Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking

This thesis, is an explorative research, manifesting factors that influence the relationship between a designer and their design tool. The interest of the thesis is in the epistemic role of a design tool and how it can influence a designer’s thinking in the concept development phase of architectural...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tahsiri, Mina
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48227/
_version_ 1848797718748594176
author Tahsiri, Mina
author_facet Tahsiri, Mina
author_sort Tahsiri, Mina
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis, is an explorative research, manifesting factors that influence the relationship between a designer and their design tool. The interest of the thesis is in the epistemic role of a design tool and how it can influence a designer’s thinking in the concept development phase of architectural design. A diversity of views regarding the effect of design tools on design thinking led the thesis to propose a new protocol think-aloud study framework for studying design behaviour based on the theory of Distributed Cognition, where cognition is seen to be distributed between the internal space of the mind and the external space provided by the medium of the design tool. The new framework used in this study, enables the protocol data from the design processes to be categorised and analysed based on the cognitive space they are associated with. It is applied to a case of six architecture students executing three design tasks using a different design tool each time; namely pencil and paper, and 3D modelling software Sketch Up and Rhinoceros 3D. The analysis is carried out qualitatively using a combination of ethnographic observations and representational graphs of the designers’ distributed cognitive activity. The results show that although a difference in design tool may not significantly affect the designer’s productivity in terms of number of ideas created, it affects their management of the task and the dynamics of their design activities. Three factors are identified that can influence a design tool’s effect on design thinking: 1- the amount of information a designer has to deal with in each frame of their design process, 2- the immediate availability of certain functions of a design tool and 3- the cost designers associate with retrieving from errors and mistakes when using a particular design tool. The thesis concludes by recommending further empirical research that use other methods such as brain imaging to complement findings of this study and examine the effect of each of the aforementioned factors on cognitive demand as the next step in the enhancement of design tools as supports for design thinking.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:08:20Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-48227
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:08:20Z
publishDate 2018
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-482272025-02-28T13:56:16Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48227/ Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking Tahsiri, Mina This thesis, is an explorative research, manifesting factors that influence the relationship between a designer and their design tool. The interest of the thesis is in the epistemic role of a design tool and how it can influence a designer’s thinking in the concept development phase of architectural design. A diversity of views regarding the effect of design tools on design thinking led the thesis to propose a new protocol think-aloud study framework for studying design behaviour based on the theory of Distributed Cognition, where cognition is seen to be distributed between the internal space of the mind and the external space provided by the medium of the design tool. The new framework used in this study, enables the protocol data from the design processes to be categorised and analysed based on the cognitive space they are associated with. It is applied to a case of six architecture students executing three design tasks using a different design tool each time; namely pencil and paper, and 3D modelling software Sketch Up and Rhinoceros 3D. The analysis is carried out qualitatively using a combination of ethnographic observations and representational graphs of the designers’ distributed cognitive activity. The results show that although a difference in design tool may not significantly affect the designer’s productivity in terms of number of ideas created, it affects their management of the task and the dynamics of their design activities. Three factors are identified that can influence a design tool’s effect on design thinking: 1- the amount of information a designer has to deal with in each frame of their design process, 2- the immediate availability of certain functions of a design tool and 3- the cost designers associate with retrieving from errors and mistakes when using a particular design tool. The thesis concludes by recommending further empirical research that use other methods such as brain imaging to complement findings of this study and examine the effect of each of the aforementioned factors on cognitive demand as the next step in the enhancement of design tools as supports for design thinking. 2018-07-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48227/1/3Mina_Tahsiri_corrected%20PhD%20Thesis_2017.pdf Tahsiri, Mina (2018) Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. design behaviour; design thinking; Distributed Cognition; design tools; protocol study; coding scheme; creativity; drawing; architectural design; Computer Aided Design
spellingShingle design behaviour; design thinking; Distributed Cognition; design tools; protocol study; coding scheme; creativity; drawing; architectural design; Computer Aided Design
Tahsiri, Mina
Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
title Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
title_full Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
title_fullStr Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
title_full_unstemmed Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
title_short Design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
title_sort design behaviour and distributed cognition: a protocol study on the effect of design tools on the process of architectural design thinking
topic design behaviour; design thinking; Distributed Cognition; design tools; protocol study; coding scheme; creativity; drawing; architectural design; Computer Aided Design
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48227/