Keywords
design process evolution, design routines, sequence analysis
Abstract
With the introduction of new digital and physical tools into the workplace, the process of design has dramatically changed over the past few decades. Thus, design processes have evolved into many forms which vary, not only between organizations, but within organizations, and even within teams over time. These myriad “mutations” of the design process call for a new method to identify patterns of design activity and their change in order to deeply understand the design process. In this paper we suggest a new method for identifying patterns of activity in design teams. Such activity involves composites of distributed interactions – both socially and across digital and physical artifacts. We argue that these identifiable patterns comprise the "DNA" of design routines. To capture these patterns, we extend the sequence analysis techniques that are commonly used in genetic research to capture a design team’s interactions with both digital and physical tools over time.
Original Publication Citation
Gaskin, J., Schutz, D., Thummadi, V., Weiss, A., Berente, N., Lyytinen, K., Yoo, Y. (2010) “Design DNA Sequencing: A Set of Methodological Artifacts for Sequencing Socio-technical Design Routines,” Research Methods, ICIS St. Louis, MO, December 2010.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Gaskin, James; Lyytinen, Kalle; Thummadi, Veeresh; Schutz, Douglas; Yoo, Youngjin; Weiss, Aaron; and Berente, Nicholas, "Design DNA Sequencing: A Set of Methodological Artifacts for Sequencing Socio-technical Design Routines" (2010). Faculty Publications. 9406.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/9406
Document Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
2010
Publisher
Research Methods, ICIS
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Information Systems Management
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