Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 18th Apr 2026, 04:07:40pm CEST
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Daily Overview |
| 8:00am - 8:45am |
D3-R: Registration |
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| 8:45am - 9:45am |
D311: CONCEPTS, FRAMEWORKS AND PRACTICES IN CIRCULAR DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Göran Broman, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden Analysis of product life cycles in the context of the circular economy and its strategies University of Stuttgart, Germany Circular design meets environmental sensing: a comparative study University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Towards collaboration in circular ecosystems: barriers, enablers, and insights from European projects 1: Division of Product Development, Department of Industrial and Materials Science, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; 2: Department of Design, Politecnico di Milano, Italy A systematic review on the implementation of Cradle to Cradle in product development 1: Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany; 2: Siemens Healthineers AG, Germany |
D312: AI INTEGRATION AND PRACTICE IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Peter R. N. Childs, Imperial College London, United Kingdom A structural framework for generative engineering and design assistance systems development Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany Human-AI co-creation: why, what, and how? 1: Department of Information Systems, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China); 2: Department of Systems Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China) Handling AI-generated knowledge artifacts in generative product engineering 1: RPTU University Kaiserslautern-Landau, Germany; 2: Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Reframing AI readiness: a multi-dimensional use case-centered AI readiness framework University of Stuttgart, Germany |
D313: VISUALISING, COMMUNICATING AND NAVIGATING COMPLEX DESIGN SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Jean-Francois Boujut, Grenoble INP, France Visualizing and structuring complex bills of materials: a framework for enhanced engineering operations in custom manufacturing 1: Technical University of Denmark, Denmark; 2: NKT Photonics, Denmark Virtual reality-supported empathy in design: experimental evidence on problem framing and ideation 1: Center for Ubiquitous Computing, University of Oulu, Finland; 2: School of Information Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, United States of America; 3: School of Architecture, Ariel University, Israel; 4: Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan A product-oriented visualization method supporting communication and planning in engineering reviews 1: ISEM - Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany; 2: IPEK - Institute of Product Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany A design tool to support the specification of mixed reality prototypes University of Bristol, United Kingdom |
| D314: KNOWLEDGE AND ORGANISATIONAL SYSTEMS IN ENGINEERING DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Thierry Gidel, Université de technologie de Compiègne, France Be yourself – be an engineer: personal strengths and value in an interconnected engineering ecosystem 1: The Open University, United Kingdom; 2: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Navigating knowledge silos and system distrust in cross-sectoral R&D Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Russian Federation The seven parameters of organizational change 1: CentraleSupélec, France; 2: Université Paris Saclay, France; 3: Grenoble Ecole de Management, France; 4: École de technologie supérieure, Canada Capability-based engineering transformation – the periodic table of engineering capabilities 1: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany; 2: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany |
D315: DESIGN FOR HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS AND SERVICES Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Valeria Pannunzio, TU Delft, Netherlands, The Seeing like nature: designing health communication with biomimetic patterns exemplified in COVID-19 prevention 1: Independent researcher; 2: University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Relational design experiments for improved health care access for persons who sell sexual services in Trondheim Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Exploring a regulatory mapping approach for designing digital mental health interventions within the EU context 1: Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands; 2: Surgery Department, Erasmus University Medical Center, The Netherlands Data-informed healthcare service design for multiple long-term conditions using online patient stories University of Exeter, United Kingdom |
D316: EXPLORING GEOMETRY FOR ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Ajit Panesar, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Design for AM: the impact of the shell feature on the residual stress in directed energy deposition components University of Bristol, United Kingdom Geometry-based estimation of manufacturing complexity of fused filament fabrication printed products University of Bayreuth, Germany Automation of part preparation for PBF-LB/M–based additive repair of turbine blades 1: Institute of Product Development (IPeG), Leibniz University Hannover, Germany; 2: MTU Maintenance Hannover GmbH, Germany |
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| 9:45am - 10:15am |
D3-RB1: Refreshment Break |
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| 10:15am - 11:15am |
D321: DESIGN FOR CIRCULARITY AND REMANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Flore Vallet, Université de Technologie de Compiègne, France Understanding the growing need for design for circularity – investigating remanufacturing profitability barriers in an automotive industry case Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Operationalising sustainability in engineering design – towards a methodological framework for design for R Leibniz University Hannover, Germany LCA simplification in the context of packaging reuse loops Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech, UMR SayFood, France How do design-related remanufacturing barriers and enablers affect business models? A retrospective analysis of remanufacturing cases Technical University of Denmark, DTU Construct, Denmark |
D322: ADOPTION OF GENERATIVE AI IN ENGINEERING DESIGN CHALLENGES AND PRACTICES Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Nikola Vukašinović, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Slovenia Challenges hindering the application of GenAI methods in engineering design and the product development process: a meta-analysis 1: Dresden University of Technology, Germany; 2: MAN Truck & Bus SE, Germany How are professional practices adopting generative AI? The case of an engineering design and product development team 1: Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; 2: Universidad EAFIT, Colombia What designers need from agentic AI: case of circularity and CMF design 1: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; 2: Intended Future, Sweden; 3: Hochschule Niederrhein University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 4: Royal College of Art, United Kingdom Still no smart service? A review of technical barriers to smart service adoption in the GenAI era 1: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany; 2: Chair for Advanced Systems Engineering, Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany |
D323: ADVANCING PROTOTYPING METHODS AND PRACTICES Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Filip Valjak, University of Zagreb FA, Croatia The industrial perspective on the value of immersive reality design technologies 1: University of Bristol, United Kingdom; 2: Ensera Design, United Kingdom; 3: Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre, United Kingdom A lean experimental approach for proof-of-concept investigation University of Stuttgart, Germany Rapid prototyping PCBs: recommendations for utilising PCB production as a design tool 1: Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; 2: Vitroscope AS, Norway Evaluating and refining the criticality scale for structured planning of prototype sequences University of Rostock, Germany |
| D324: AI-DRIVEN KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY FROM ENGINEERING DOCUMENTS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Ji Han, The University of Exeter, United Kingdom Object detection in technical drawings for data-driven design: the case of patents 1: Università di Pisa, Italy; 2: Business Engineering for Data Science (B4DS) research group, Italy; 3: Coesia, Italy Can large language models understand engineering design patents? An exploratory study INDEX, University of Exeter, United Kingdom Evaluating large language models for automated design structure matrix extraction from unstructured documents: an empirical study Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India Evaluating large language models for technology-oriented searches in engineering design 1: Politecnico di Milano, Italy; 2: Fondazione Politecnico di Milano, Italy |
D325: DESIGN FOR SUSTAINABLE AND CIRCULAR HEALTHCARE Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Anja Maier, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom What does a sustainable hospital look like? Patient perspectives on waste, reuse, and information University of Antwerp, Belgium Adoption of refurbished and upgraded medical imaging equipment: user-centered insights for sustainable design 1: Université Paris-Saclay, CentraleSupélec, Laboratoire Genie Industriel, France; 2: General Electric Medical Systems, France; 3: Centre Hospitalier Regional Universitaire Rennes, France A co-design approach to reducing pharmaceutical waste 1: University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom; 2: German Jordanian University, Jordan Designing reuse models for clinical trial packaging to stimulate the transition towards a circular economy University of Antwerp, Belgium |
D326: AI-DRIVEN DESIGN AND PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Jonathan Cagan, Carnegie Mellon University, United States of America A concept for AI supported knowledge extraction in design for additive manufacturing University of Rostock, Germany Generative AI in the design for additive manufacturing of orthotic devices – a literature review 1: Politecnico di Milano, Italy; 2: Luleå University of Technology, Sweden Mechanical performance of generative design structures for material extrusion: solid vs shells across mass targets Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Learning impact of CAD geometry change on finite element analysis results 1: Stellantis, Germany; 2: Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany |
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| 11:15am - 11:30am |
D3-TB1: Transition Break |
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| 11:30am - 12:30pm |
D331: SUSTAINABILITY METHODS, METRICS AND DECISION SUPPORT Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Yuri Borgianni, Free University of Bozen|Bolzano, Italy Designing within planetary boundaries: a systematic review and development of requirements for a design support tool University of Technology Chemnitz, Germany Evaluating two approaches for sustainability criteria identification and assessment in support of early product development decisions Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden Systematic identification of components suitable for additive manufacturing to enhance product circularity and reduce environmental impacts 1: Institute of Product Engineering, Saarland University, Germany; 2: Institute of Production and Informatics, University of Applied Sciences Kempten, Germany Digital product passports and the challenge of product structure granularity: a decision-making framework for the level of DPP integration 1: Paderborn University, Germany; 2: Associação Data CoLAB - Laboratório Colaborativo Para Serviços de Inovação Orientados Para Os Dados, Portugal |
D332: AI-AUGMENTED REQUIREMENTS ENGINEERING Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Beshoy Morkos, University of Georgia, United States of America AI applications in requirements engineering: a systematic mapping study 1: IPEK - Institute of Product Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany; 2: FAPS - Institute for Factory Automation and Production Systems, Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany An LLM model to guide and enrich the understanding of stakeholder value and development of product requirements Carnegie Mellon University, United States of America Context-aware large language models for ambiguity detection in requirements 1: University of Technology Sydney, Australia; 2: Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Enabling AI-supported requirements engineering through model-based systems engineering and characteristics-properties modeling Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany |
D333: PROTOTYPING FOR DESIGN EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Chris Snider, University of Bristol, United Kingdom Iterative industrial prototyping for Industry 4.0: data collection for factory-design simulation in seafood processing 1: Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; 2: Optimar AS, Norway Design and prototyping exploration of an end effector for automated drug compounding University of Bath, United Kingdom Foresight prototyping: developing an evaluation framework and strategy for future-oriented design 1: Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology, China; 2: Tsinghua University, China Low-fidelity prototypes to clear the fuzzy front end of NewSpace projects Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway |
| D334: DESIGN KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION AND USE Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Clement Fortin, Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Russian Federation Knowledge representation in product design: a literature review INDEX, University of Exeter, United Kingdom A computational framework for design-by-analogy using semantic-network representations 1: Imperial College London, United Kingdom; 2: Tsinghua University, China; 3: Zhejiang University, China; 4: University of Wisconsin–Madison, United States of America Designing a knowledge audit for human-AI knowledge augmentation: a study in a consulting firm 1: CentraleSupélec, France; 2: Sibylone, France Inventory of design, engineering and analysis tool environments (IDEATE) 1: School of Electrical, Electronic & Mechanical Engineering, University of Bristol, United Kingdom; 2: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Queen’s University Belfast, United Kingdom |
D335: DESIGNING HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS AND SERVICES Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Els Du Bois, University of Antwerp, Belgium Design practitioners’ perspectives on digital health implementation in complex systems Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Exploring the role of a systems approach in improving long-COVID clinics 1: Health Systems Design Group, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; 2: Therapies Department, Whipps Cross Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom; 3: Department of Anaesthesia, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom; 4: Cambridge Public Health interdisciplinary research centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom Designing hope-oriented service touchpoints for adolescent oral health in public dental care 1: Department of Design, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; 2: Department of Health Research, SINTEF, Norway Collaborative mapping of bottlenecks and opportunities for AI-supported triage in Dutch mental healthcare 1: Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands; 2: Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands; 3: University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands; 4: Surgery Department, Erasmus University Medical Center, The Netherlands |
D336: DATA-DRIVEN AND MULTI-MATERIAL DESIGN IN ADVANCED DFAM Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Sandro Barone, University of Pisa, Italy Design for additive manufacturing of multi-material microreactors: a simulative study on specific surface area and thermal management Institute of Product Development (IPeG), Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Designing for compliance at the microscale: DfAM lessons from a 2PP-printed bellows structure for sensing and actuation Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Machine-learning-based one-to-many inverse design of multi-material lattices Imperial College London, United Kingdom Design guidelines for electrical conductors and Joule-heating structures fabricated additively by material extrusion 1: Institute for Engineering Design, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany; 2: Graduate Institute of Applied Science and Technology, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taiwan |
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| 12:30pm - 2:00pm |
D3-L: Lunch Location: Restaurant Cavtat |
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| 2:00pm - 3:15pm |
D3-DD: DESIGN Debate (6th edition) Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: P. John Clarkson, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom |
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| 3:15pm - 3:45pm |
D3-RB2: Refreshment Break |
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| 3:45pm - 4:45pm |
D341: METHODS AND TOOLS FOR PRODUCT CIRCULARITY ASSESSMENT Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Luke Gooding, Stockholm Environment Institute - York, United Kingdom Holistic product circularity assessment of a balance bike Saarland University, Germany Circular Life Cycle Blueprint: a visual tool for circular product and component design Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore Hierarchical lifecycle modelling in circular product development 1: Institute of Human Factors and Technology Management (IAT), University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2: Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Engineering IAO, Germany Analyzing product circularity: a comparative assessment of existing approaches and development of a retention-option-weighted multi-criteria assessment tool 1: Saarland University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 2: ECO² Research Group, Fraunhofer IZFP, Germany |
D342: LLM-SUPPORTED USER RESEARCH Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Katja Thoring, Technical University of Munich, Germany From online reviews to Kano model: a large language model method and case study Università di Pisa, Italy Can LLM-driven synthetic participants help user research? A case study in designing augmented reality for education 1: University of Bath, United Kingdom; 2: SENAI Innovation Institute for Information and Communication Technologies, Brazil; 3: Universidade de Pernambuco, Brazil; 4: University of Oxford, United Kingdom LLM-based voice chatbot surveys as an alternative to post-experience questionnaires: probe-controlled, ultra-short field interviews Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan On using LLM reasoning to support reflection in design thinking 1: University of Thessaly, Greece; 2: University of the Aegean |
D343: DESIGN RESEARCH METHODS AND COMPLEXITY METRICS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Mario Štorga, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia Mapping design research methods: foundations for a design research quality hub 1: Dresden University of Technology, Germany; 2: Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, G-SCOP, France; 3: Federal University of Uberlândia, Brazil Guidelines for dual impact research methodology: a framework for industry-academia collaboration University of Twente, The Netherlands Toward design for complexity: an integrated framework for iterative co-evolution across complex socio-technical systems 1: Cornell University, United States of America; 2: University of Texas at Dallas, United States of America; 3: University of Michigan, United States of America Measure it to manage it – quantitative review of product family complexity metrics 1: Hamburg University of Technology, Germany; 2: Odego GmbH, Germany |
| D344: STRUCTURAL COMPLEXITY AND INTERFACE MANAGEMENT Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Sven Matthiesen, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Investigating a DSM/graph modeling approach for the interdisciplinary design of data-centric complex systems – a case study on autonomous public transportation University of Stuttgart, Germany Managing technical debt at Ubisoft IT: interfaces and change propagation in engineering systems interventions 1: Mines Paris - PSL, France; 2: Ubisoft, France Modular configuration model for complex engineering products Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Model context protocol for MBSE: a unified interoperable agentic framework for systems modelling 1: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany; 2: Audi AG, Germany; 3: Engineering Design (KTmfk), Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany; 4: Fraunhofer Institute for Mechatronic Systems Design, Paderborn, Germany |
D345: INTEGRATING USER INSIGHTS IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Saeema Ahmed-Kristensen, University of Exeter, United Kingdom “P-Heroes”: designing a superhero family for pediatric urinary incontinence care 1: Department of Product Development, Faculty of Design Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium; 2: Department of Research and Development, Minze Health NV, Belgium; 3: Department of Urotherapy, Psychology and Urology, Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital, University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands; 4: Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium; 5: Department of Urology, University Hospital Antwerp, Belgium; 6: Antwerp Surgical Training, Anatomy and Research Centre (ASTARC), Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium Determining the design dimensions of the conventional electrode fixation methods used in transcranial electrical stimulation 1: University of Twente, The Netherlands; 2: Koç University, Turkey A parametric approach to mass customised hand wearable cooling products to improve clinical efficacy for CIPN 1: Paxman, United Kingdom; 2: School of Mechanical Engineering, University of Leeds, United Kingdom Enabling the coding of affordances based on the UX grammar 1: Politecnico di Torino, Italy; 2: CentraleSupélec, Université Paris-Saclay, France |
D346: ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Tino Stanković, ETH Zurich, Switzerland From Earth gravity to microgravity: benchmarking additively manufactured particle-damped structures in the Einstein-Elevator 1: Institute of Product Development (IPeG), Leibniz University Hannover, Germany; 2: Institute of Transport and Automation Technology (ITA), Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Secure by design: exploring a minimal Web3.0 trust network to provide de-centralised secure, private, and provenance preserving design and manufacture workflows 1: University of Bristol, United Kingdom; 2: Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Investigation into the rolling resistance of novel 3D printed e-scooter tyres University of Canterbury, New Zealand Investigation of TPMS superposition to enhance heat transfer surface area and overhang surface reduction in compact heat exchanger design Chair of Virtual Product Development, Dresden University of Technology, Germany |
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| 4:45pm - 5:00pm |
D3-TB2: Transition Break |
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| 5:00pm - 6:00pm |
D351: INTEGRATING LCA INTO DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Mario Fargnoli, Sapienza Uiversity of Rome, Italy Implementation of LCA-based product design through semantic technologies Fraunhofer IPK, Germany A framework for evaluating CAD-integrated environmental assessment tools through the lens of LCA limitations 1: Université de Technologie de Compiègne, France; 2: CETIM, France Development of an LCA-based framework for environmental performance interpretation in energy-intensive industries Politecnico di Bari, Italy Development and validation of a parametric model for fast life cycle assessment in early embodiment design 1: Corporate Research Center ABB AG, Germany; 2: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany |
D352: AI-ASSISTED EVALUATION AND ESTIMATION IN ENGINEERING DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Vishal Singh, Indian Institute of Science, India Multi-agent generative AI for concept evaluation: consistency, knowledge integration and human alignment 1: Offenburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 2: Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany; 3: Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 4: Texas A&M University, United States of America; 5: Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore The product singularity: universal AI framework for multimodal product understanding, evaluation, and benchmarking Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India Automatic assessment of rust level on screws using convolutional neural networks 1: Università Politecnica delle Marche, Italy; 2: Polytech Marseille, France; 3: Circular Momentum, Denmark Life cycle cost estimation in product-service systems: a review of machine learning methods Leibniz University Hannover, Germany |
D353: EXPLORATORY AND SPECULATIVE APPROACHES IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Gaetano Cascini, Politecnico di Milano, Italy TRL-based mapping of biomimetic projects: identification of development patterns and their influencing factors 1: UniLaSalle, France; 2: Ikos Lab, France; 3: Ceebios, Centre d’études et d’expertises en biomimétisme, France Future Archeologies Canvas: a visual tool for facilitating speculative ideation and revealing limits of futures perception Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Germany Worlding the sense of place: narrative design approach to reimagining regional resources 1: Department of Strategic Design, Faculty of Design, Kyushu University, Japan; 2: School of Design, Kyushu University, Japan Room for critique: spatial and sensory design of constructive feedback environments Technical University of Munich, Germany |
| D354: RESILIENCE AND COMPLEXITY IN ENGINEERING SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Panos Y. Papalambros, University of Michigan, United States of America Resilience-by-design: maturity model for assessing the resilience capabilities of automotive systems architecture in the concept phase 1: Fraunhofer Institute for Mechatronic Systems Design, Germany; 2: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany For a better understanding of the logical interdependencies of infrastructures and role of human factor: a review of modeling and simulation applications CentraleSupélec, France Project complexity and cost escalations in the early design of railway megaprojects 1: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; 2: Swedish Transport Administration, Sweden; 3: The Open University, United Kingdom A study on resilience through redundant sensing in autonomous cyber-physical systems Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany |
D355: EMOTIONAL, COGNITIVE AND SENSORY ASPECTS OF USER EXPERIENCE IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Chajoong Kim, UNIST, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Emotional design through CMF: a comparative study across visceral, behavioural, and reflective levels Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University, Turkey Clustering perceived user experience in manual machine operation: an explorative pilot study Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Cognitive experience design: the effect of luminance change of central light on perceived time Kyushu University, Japan Material attunement in minimal media: designing tactility for information engagement 1: Imperial College London, United Kingdom; 2: Royal College of Art, United Kingdom |
D356: SIMULATION-DRIVEN DESIGN OF ENGINEERING SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Dragan Žeželj, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia Simulation-driven design of a cell-to-pack battery pack for electrified refrigerated vehicles 1: INEGI – Institute of Science and Innovation in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Portugal; 2: AddVolt, Portugal; 3: INL - International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory, Portugal; 4: PIEP - Pólo de Inovação em Engenharia de Polímeros, Portugal An approach to the test design for smart composite vessels enabling remaining useful life estimation 1: Hamburg University of Technology, Germany; 2: University of Melbourne, Australia; 3: Swinburne University of Technology, Australia Designing motion: analytical and computational exploration of a kinetic sculpture’s behaviour University of Canterbury, New Zealand Simulation-driven design approach for high power-density electric vehicle power electronics 1: INEGI – Institute of Science and Innovation in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Portugal; 2: AddVolt, Portugal; 3: INL - International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory, Portugal; 4: PIEP - Pólo de Inovação em Engenharia de Polímeros, Portugal |
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| 8:00pm - 10:00pm |
D3-CD: Conference Dinner |
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