DocumentCode
624051
Title
Dependency based collaborative design
Author
Drabble, Brian
Author_Institution
DMM Ventures, Inc., Yorktown, VA, USA
fYear
2013
fDate
20-24 May 2013
Firstpage
419
Lastpage
426
Abstract
The ability to provide support to a group of designers, analysts and other users who are collaborating on an evolving design requires the dual capabilities of managing options for an individual designer while at the same time managing the dependencies between different sets of designer´s options. For example, if designer A is creating a design for a helicopters hydraulics system and this is dependent on electrical power (EP) from a sub-system from designer B then how can the workflows, decisions and options of the two designers be managed so that each can understand the implications of their own design decisions and more importantly the implications and design decisions they force on others? The proposed CAPS system employs two dependency reasoning engines one handles quantitative values and other qualitative values. The quantitative engine identifies that a motor with an output of 3000rpm allows a generator to output 100V whereas the qualitative engine could rule out several motors options if the overall design states that the weight of a helicopters transmission needs to be comparable to that of the engine or the positioning of a sensor makes it susceptible to an EM process that could affect its function. A mapping capability is provided allowing analysis to be passed between the two engines. The proposed CAPS architecture has been evaluated against a large collaborative design task involving the design of the electrical, hydraulic, structural and mechanical aspects of a helicopter.
Keywords
decision making; design engineering; engines; groupware; helicopters; hydraulic systems; CAPS architecture; CAPS system; EM process; collaborative design task; dependency based collaborative design; dependency reasoning engines; design decisions; designer options; electrical aspect; electrical power; helicopters hydraulics system; helicopters transmission; hydraulic aspect; mapping capability; mechanical aspect; qualitative engine; qualitative values; quantitative engine; quantitative values; structural aspect; subsystem; Cognition; Collaboration; Coolants; Equations; Generators; Mathematical model; Production; Collaboration Enabling Technologies; Impact Analysis; Modeling Information Flows;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Collaboration Technologies and Systems (CTS), 2013 International Conference on
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-6403-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CTS.2013.6567264
Filename
6567264
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