Search DS publications

All electronic papers are available for Society members to download free of charge through this web site. Some older papers for which the Society owns the copyright are also available publicly, while others are available for purchase by non-members at a nominal charge. Where the copyright is not owned by the Society then it is not possible to offer the papers to non-members.

For advanced search functionality such as boolean operators, see "Instructions" below. 

Query returned 11805 results.

PRODUCT FAMILY DEVELOPMENT AND MANAGEMENT: ARCHITECTING FOR MAXIMUM PROFITABILITY

Nidamarthi, S.; Mechler, G.; Karandikar, H. // 2003

PROPOSAL OF LIFE CYCLE DESIGN SUPPORT METHOD USING DISPOSAL CAUSE ANALYSIS MATRIX

Umeda, Y.; Hijihara, K.; Oono, M.; Ogawa, Y.; Kobayashi, H.; Hattori, M.; Masui, K.; Fukano, A. // 2003

REAL-TIME CO-ORDINATED RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN A COMPUTATIONAL ENVIRONMENT

Coates, G.; Duffy, A. H. B.; Whitfield, R. I.; Hills, W. // 2003

RELATING THE SENSITIVITY OF PACK ASSEMBLY PROCESSES TO MACHINE CONFIGURATION AND PACK GEOMETRY

Medland, A. J.; Bowler, C.; Hicks, B. J.; Mullineux, G. // 2003

RELATIONS BETWEEN MODULARISATION AND PRODUCT STRUCTURING

Andreasen, Mogen Myrup // 2003
All products have a structure, but what is actually structure and what is seen as a good structure? We try to answer these questions by looking upon the basics of product structure, the domain theory ...

REQUIREMENTS CAPTURE FOR MEDICAL DEVICE DESIGN

Ward, J.; Shefelbine, S.; Clarkson, P. J. // 2003

REQUIREMENTS FOR A FAILURE MODE TAXONOMY FOR USE IN CONCEPTUAL DESIGN

Tumer, I. Y.; Stone, R. B.; Bell, D. G. // 2003

RESOLVING COMPLEXITY IN FATIGUE-LIMITED DESIGN

Leary, M.; Burvill, C. // 2003

RESPONSES OF NOVICE DESIGNERS TO UNSTRUCTURED PROBLEMS

Burvill, C.; Leary, M.; Weir, J. // 2003

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES FOR STUDENT DESIGN PROJECTS

Brusse-Gendre, T.; Fauvel, O. R.; Caswell, D. J.; Johnston, C. R. // 2003

SEVEN STEPS TO THE VOICE OF THE CUSTOMER

Vanalli, S.; Cziulik, C. // 2003

Boolean Searches

The following examples demonstrate some search strings that use boolean operators:

  • design community
    Find rows that contain at least one of the two words.
  • +design +community
    Find rows that contain both words.
  • +design community
    Find rows that contain the word “design”, but rank rows higher if they also contain “community”.
  • +design -community
    Find rows that contain the word “design” but not “community”.
  • +design ~community
    Find rows that contain the word “design”, but if the row also contains the word “community”, rate it lower than if row does not.
  • +design +(>community <decisions)
    Find rows that contain the words “design” and “community”, or “design” and “decisions” (in any order), but rank “design community” higher than “design decisions”
  • design*
    Find rows that contain words such as “design”, “designs”, “designing”, or “designer”.
  • "some words"
    Find rows that contain the exact phrase “some words” (for example, rows that contain “some words of wisdom” but not “some noise words”). Note that the " characters that enclose the phrase are operator characters that delimit the phrase. They are not the quotation marks that enclose the search string itself.

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