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, 05:27:45pm CEST
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Agenda Overview |
| 8:00am - 9:00am |
D1-R: Registration |
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| 9:00am - 12:30pm |
D111: Workshop 1: MAPPING VALIDITY IN DESIGN RESEARCH Location: Conference Hall Poseidon Chair: Philip Cash, Northumbria University, United Kingdom Chair: Katja Thoring, Technical University of Munich, Germany Chair: Roland M. Mueller, Berlin School of Economics and Law, Germany Chair: Romain Pinquié, Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, G-SCOP, France Chair: Kai Larsen, University of Colorado, United States of America HOSTED BY THE DS RESEARCH QUALITY SIG |
D112: Workshop 2: MEDITATIVE REFLECTIVE INTERVENTIONS FOSTERING CREATIVE ABILITY Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Björn R. Kokoschko, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, hochschule anhalt, Germany Chair: Maria Uhari-Pakkalin, Aalto University, Finland Chair: Akane Matsumae, Kyushu University, Japan HOSTED BY THE DS DESIGN CREATIVITY SIG |
D113: Workshop 3: DESIGNING RESILIENT CARE PATHWAYS: A HEALTH SYSTEMS DESIGN PERSPECTIVE Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Valeria Pannunzio, TU Delft, Netherlands, The Chair: P. John Clarkson, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Chair: Anja Maier, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Chair: Maaike Kleinsmann, TU Delft, Netherlands, The HOSTED BY THE DS HEALTH SYSTEMS DESIGN SIG |
D114: Workshop 4: DESIGNING WITH INTELLIGENCE: EXPLORING THE PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS OF AI ON DESIGN PRACTICE AND PROCESSES Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Claudia Eckert, The Open University, United Kingdom Chair: Kilian Gericke, University of Rostock, Germany Chair: Sabine Muschik, ISEM Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Germany Chair: Ola Isaksson, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Chair: Filippo Chiarello, Università di Pisa, Italy HOSTED BY THE DSDESIGN PROCESS SIG, DESIGN PRACTICE SIG AND AI IN DESIGN SIG |
D115: Workshop 5: DESIGNING BETTER PROJECT-BASED DESIGN ASSESSMENT USING THE D-LAD FRAMEWORK Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Gordon Krauss, Harvey Mudd College, United States of America Chair: Ross Brisco, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Chair: Francesca Mattioli, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Chair: Yakhoub Ndiaye, Université Cheikh Anta Diop, Senegal HOSTED BY THE DS DESIGN EDUCATION SIG |
| 12:30pm - 2:00pm |
D1-L: Lunch Location: Restaurant Cavtat |
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| 2:00pm - 5:30pm |
D131: PhD Forum Location: Conference Hall Poseidon Chair: Massimo Panarotto, Politecnico di Milano, Italy |
D132: Workshop 6: TWO DECADES OF SUSTAINABLE DESIGN: WHERE ARE WE HEADING AND HOW DO WE GET THERE? Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Sophie I. Hallstedt, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Chair: Els Du Bois, University of Antwerp, Belgium Chair: Giliam Dokter, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden HOSTED BY THE DS SUSTAINABLE DESIGN SIG |
D133: Workshop 7: MIND THE BIAS 2.0: (UN)BIASING THE DESIGNER IN THE AGE OF AI Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Niccolo Becattini, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Chair: Filippo Chiarello, Università di Pisa, Italy Chair: Samuele Colombo, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom HOSTED BY THE DS COGNITIVE DESIGN SCIENCE SIG |
D134: Workshop 8: THE DATA QUALITY PLAYBOOK FOR ENGINEERING DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Kostas Stylidis, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Chair: Bastian Quattelbaum, Hochschule Niederrhein University of Applied Sciences, Germany HOSTED BY THE DS DATA-INFORMED SIG |
D135: Workshop 9: NUDGE WORKSHOP: SMALL NUDGES, BIG IMPACT Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Nikola Bursac, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Chair: Sabine Muschik, ISEM Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Germany HOSTED BY THE DS HUMAN BEHAVIOUR IN DESIGN SIG AND DESIGN PRACTICE SIG |
| 5:45pm - 6:15pm |
D1-O: Opening Session Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Mario Štorga, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia
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| 6:15pm - 7:00pm |
D1-P: Plenary Session 1 Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Sandro J. Wartzack, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany BALANCING BREAKTHROUGH INNOVATION AND OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE WITH CLOUD-NATIVE ENGINEERING TOOLS Darren Henry Senior Vice President of General Operations at PTC |
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| 7:00pm - 8:00pm |
D1-CC: Welcome Cocktail |
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| 8:00am - 8:45am |
D2-R: Registration |
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| 8:45am - 9:45am |
D211: BEHAVIOURAL ASPECTS OF SUSTAINABLE DESIGN SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Tim C. McAloone, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Understanding and preventing behavioural rebound effects: a design tool for sustainable design across contexts Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Encouraging sustainable consumption through digital provisioning platforms: insights from Turkey Koç University, Turkey Retrofit as ecological citizenship towards participatory resilient and regenerative design 1: Stockholm Environment Institute, United Kingdom; 2: Royal College of Art, United Kingdom Exploring sustainable practices in smart product development: a field study and analysis in Quebec’s entrepreneurial ecosystem École de technologie supérieure, Canada |
D212: MODULAR PRODUCT STRATEGIES AND CONFIGURATION APPROACHES Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: David Inkermann, Technische Universität Clausthal, Germany Towards an impact model of modular product strategies Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Evaluating design automation from user input to production – insights from the bike connector tool 1: ETH Zurich, Switzerland; 2: inspire AG, Switzerland Structured overview of methodologies for assessing assembly complexity University of Stuttgart, Germany From minimum viable product via size levels to modular product family – case study on air filtration units 1: ULT AG, Germany; 2: Dresden University of Technology, Germany |
D213: COLLABORATIVE DESIGN IN DIGITAL ENVIRONMENT Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Yuki Taoka, Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan From models to impact: a human-AI approach for effective support of collaborative teams in agile product development 1: Chair of Virtual Product Development, Dresden University of Technology, Germany; 2: ISEM - Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Boundary objects in co-designing AI systems: a case study of supporting cross-functional collaboration 1: Research Institutes of Sweden, Sweden; 2: Mälardalen University, Sweden Exploring the preparation of CAD models in collaborative design sessions for mass personalised products: a case study on a custom dental abutment 1: University of Zagreb Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture, Croatia; 2: Neo Dens Ltd., Croatia Employee-centred process analysis for VR integration in product development Ostfalia University of Applied Sciences, Germany |
| D214: UNDERSTANDING DESIGN THINKING AND CREATIVITY Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Srinivasan Venkataraman, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India The impact of semantic feedback on functional connectivity during design ideation: a preliminary study 1: Center for Applied Computing, University of Oulu, Finland; 2: Drexel University, United States of America; 3: Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan Assumption-making in ill-structured problems: a reflexive thematic analysis Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India From idea to creation: exploring designers’ real-time cognitive and emotional experiences throughout the design process 1: Design Department, Tabriz Islamic Art University, Iran; 2: Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Tehran, Iran; 3: Cognitive Sciences Department, Tarbiat Modares University, Iran; 4: Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy Department, Medical Center - University of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Germany; 5: Mechanical Engineering Department, Politecnico di Milano, Italy A novel approach to design creativity assessment: a comparative evaluation 1: Center for Ubiquitous Computing, University of Oulu, Finland; 2: Department of Design, Organisation and Strategy, Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands; 3: Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan |
D215: FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Peter Törlind, Luleå University of Technology, Sweden A novel design for the integration of conventional rolling bearings into MEX-manufactured components 1: Technische Universität Berlin, Germany; 2: Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany Evaluation of electrical contacting approaches for additively manufactured conductive polymer composites Institute for Engineering Design, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany Particle damping optimization and multi-material additive manufacturing of an atom chip bracket: a case study 1: Institute of Product Development (IPeG), Leibniz University Hannover, Germany; 2: Institute of Dynamics and Vibration Research, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany A novel selection framework of joining technologies for metal additive manufacturing Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany |
D216: INNOVATIONS IN ENGINEERING DESIGN EDUCATION AND LEARNING Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Gordon Krauss, Harvey Mudd College, United States of America Mechatronics education with project-based learning supported by e-learning Biomedical Engineering Lab, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Exploring the role of product teardown on students’ engineering education 1: School of Design, University of Zagreb Faculty of Architecture, Croatia; 2: SICK Mobilisis, Croatia; 3: University of Zagreb Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture, Croatia Educating compliance: a foundation-first, hands-on approach to compliant mechanism design 1: University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom; 2: National Manufacturing Institute Scotland, United Kingdom From key users to end users: scaling guideline-based learning for sustainable CAD/PLM adoption ARTECH Consulting GmbH, Germany |
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| 9:45am - 10:15am |
D2-RB1: Refreshment Break |
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| 10:15am - 11:15am |
D221: UNDERSTANDING AND PREVENTING REBOUND EFFECTS IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Bernard Yannou, CentraleSupélec, France Anticipating and preventing rebound effects by design: an action research study of refillable packaging at Beiersdorf 1: DTU Construct, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark; 2: Beiersdorf AG, Germany Diagnosing the future social impacts of biowaste treatment facilities during the pre-design phase Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech, UMR SayFood, France Design for circular behaviour: a literature-based conceptual model Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany Designers’ challenges in anticipating and preventing rebound effects: insights from industry interviews Technical University of Denmark, Denmark |
D222: PRODUCT ARCHITECTURE AND SUSTAINABILITY Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Dieter Krause, Hamburg University of Technology (TUHH), Germany Sustainability by design: the impact of product architecture decisions on the sustainability of products – a practitioner qualitative assessment Fraunhofer IEM, Germany Extending QFD for smart product-service systems with smartness parameter categorization 1: Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy; 2: Linköping University, Sweden Exploring the relationship between attribute centrality and sustainability perception in eco-designed products Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy Design for disassembly in footwear: identification and classification of product requirements 1: Research Institute for Design, Media and Culture [ID+], IPCA, Portugal; 2: Higher Professional Technical School, IPCA, Portugal |
D223: CO-DESIGN AND CO-CREATION IN DIVERSE DESIGN CONTEXTS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Milene Gonçalves, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, The Design tools as catalysts for shared problem framing in West African entrepreneurial contexts 1: Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, G-SCOP, France; 2: CIRAD, UMR Innovation, France Empowering designer-artisan partnership through capability-based co-design 1: Tsinghua University, China; 2: University of Leeds, United Kingdom From scenarios to negotiation games: staging the co-evolution of problem and solution spaces Aalborg University Copenhagen, Denmark Co-creation with end-users to respond to the B2B industry: a case study 1: École Supérieure des Technologies et des Affaires (ESTA), France; 2: Université Marie et Louis Pasteur (UMLP), ELLIADD Laboratory (U.R. n°4661), Belfort, France |
| D224: HUMAN–AI CO-CREATION IN DESIGN PRACTICE Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: John Gero, Drexel University, United States of America AI as creative partner: exploring perceived roles in human-AI co-creation Technical University of Munich, Germany Understanding designers’ experiences with generative AI through user interaction pattern analysis 1: Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; 2: University of Bristol, United Kingdom Motivation and post-design evaluations of AI usage behind AI-assisted design 1: Imperial College London, United Kingdom; 2: College of Computer Science and Technology, Zhejiang University, China; 3: Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Artificial co-intelligence in multi-domain platform development: what is now and what is next? Politecnico di Milano, Italy |
D225: PROCESS UNDERSTANDING AND CONTROL IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Marco Mandolini, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Italy Differential design through adhesive bonding of AM subcomponents University of the Bundeswehr Munich, Germany Understanding and controlling environmental effects in direct ink writing of upcycled biomaterials Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Thermal process monitoring for layer adhesion by tracking nozzle position in material extrusion Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Development and investigation of a new path-planning design for FLM-3D-printing to reduce anisotropy Engineering Design and Product Development, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, TU Dortmund University, Germany |
D226: APPROACHES TO ENGINEERING DESIGN EDUCATION AND TRAINING Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Jonathan Borg, University of Malta, Malta Using guidelines to train key users: accelerate skills development during a CAD/PDM software transition ARTECH Consulting GmbH, Germany Engineering design and entrepreneurship education: insights from the Design Society 1: Luleå University of Technology, Sweden; 2: Creaternity Aerospace Lab, Sweden; 3: Astromerge, United States of America Enhancing engineering design learning: an educational case study with the systems engineering method matrix Clausthal University of Technology, Germany Review of a modular and scalable course concept for sustainable product development: a multi-institutional case study Westfälische Hochschule, Germany |
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| 11:15am - 11:30am |
D2-TB1: Transition Break |
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| 11:30am - 12:30pm |
D231: ORGANISATIONAL AND PROCESS INTEGRATION IN DESIGN FOR SUSTAINABILITY Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Daniela C. A. Pigosso, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Implementation of sustainability in the product development process: a case study in the aerospace industry 1: GKN Aerospace, Sweden; 2: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden From assessment to agency: designing a learner-led activity to map sustainable transformation in manufacturing organisations Politecnico di Milano, Italy Driving product innovation for greenhouse gas reduction: insights from European manufacturing 1: University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; 2: State University of Campinas, Brazil; 3: Pontifical Catholic University of Paraná, Brazil; 4: Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil Embedding transdisciplinary conversation in design processes: a method for sustainability-oriented product design University of Stuttgart, Germany |
D232: DIGITAL TWINS IN PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Julia Guérineau, École de technologie supérieure, Canada Expert-based evaluation of digital twin transfer potential for space systems applications Institute for Technical Product Development, University of the Bundeswehr Munich, Germany Designing digital twins: a graph-based schema to enable systematic cost-benefit analysis University of Bristol, United Kingdom Potentials and challenges of the digital twin for product development: a systematic literature review Institute of Product Development, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Utilising 2D tracking to understand individual difference and personalisation in ergometer rowing 1: University of Bristol, United Kingdom; 2: University of Bath, United Kingdom |
D233: STRATEGIC APPROACHES TO INNOVATION AND PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Matthias R. Guertler, University of Technology Sydney, Australia How to develop a venture clienting strategy? 1: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany; 2: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany Design for mission-driven technology maturation 1: Aarhus University, Denmark; 2: University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Development of perpetual innovative products: overcoming uncertainties by testing 1: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany; 2: The Open University, United Kingdom Bridging academia and industry: the role of consultants in implementing sustainable product development tools 1: Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden; 2: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden |
| D234: FRAMING PROCESSES IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Pascal Le Masson, Mines Paris PSL, France Sequencing idea factories | bridging creativity frameworks and domain-specific design practice 1: Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany; 2: Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 3: University of Rostock, Germany; 4: Offenburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 5: Texas A&M University, United States of America Framing and reframing in design: the use of an NLP-based memory model 1: Ariel University, Israel; 2: Drexel University, United States of America Framing: a computable principle of design for systems Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India Exploring design for environmental impact: expanding the context phase and problem framing University of Antwerp, Belgium |
D235: VALIDATION AND PERFORMANCE IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Marcel Bartz, TU Dortmund University, Germany Thermal process monitoring for part certification in material extrusion additive manufacturing Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Dimensional repeatability in additive manufacturing: assessment and design implications Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy A structured process for iterative DfAM: application to military individualisation University of the Bundeswehr Munich, Germany Characterising thermal effects on ultimate tensile strength, strain, and tensile modulus by material extrusion of carbon fibre reinforced polyamide 6 Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway |
D236: AI-ENHANCED LEARNING IN DESIGN EDUCATION Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Ross Brisco, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom More AI means less design? Empirical insights from design education 1: TUM School of Engineering and Design, Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2: Hilti Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH, Germany Generative AI adoption in engineering: a cluster analysis of student profiles for designing personalized learning support College of Engineering, University of Georgia, United States of America Drivers and barriers of learning MBSE: design and validation of a RAG-based AI chatbot leveraging smart views 1: ISEM - Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany; 2: TRUMPF SE + Co. KG, Germany; 3: Technische Universität Berlin, Germany; 4: Einstein Center Digital Future, Germany Intelligent narratives: rethinking design education through the use of generative AI as a storytelling tool Iowa State University, United States of America |
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| 12:30pm - 2:00pm |
D2-L: Lunch Location: Restaurant Cavtat |
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| 2:00pm - 2:45pm |
D2-P: Plenary Session 2 Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Stanko Škec, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia FROM DATA TO DESIGN: RETHINKING ENGINEERING DESIGN WITH NEXT-GEN AI Dr Faez Ahmed Associate Professor, Doherty Chair of Ocean Utilization, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
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| 2:45pm - 3:15pm |
D2-RB2: Refreshment Break |
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| 3:15pm - 4:15pm |
D241: DESIGN FOR WELLBEING, INCLUSIVITY AND SOCIETAL IMPACT Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Sophie I. Hallstedt, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Addressing wellbeing, health, and inclusivity in sustainable design for mobility: Paris and Cairo 1: Université de Technologie de Compiègne, France; 2: CentraleSupélec, France; 3: The American University in Cairo, Egypt Transition design for cultural inclusivity: a systemic service design perspective on the halal ecosystem 1: Department of Strategic Design, Faculty of Design, Kyushu University, Japan; 2: Graduate School of Design, Kyushu University, Japan Designing an interregional innovation community for the circular economy Saarland University of Applied Sciences, Germany Cultivating sustainable conditions for citizen(s)… through ‘engaging design’ 1: Royal College of Art, United Kingdom; 2: École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland |
D242: DATA-DRIVEN FRAMEWORKS FOR DESIGN SUPPORT Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Gualtiero Fantoni, University of Pisa, Italy Leveraging extreme-scale simulation data: a workflow framework for multidisciplinary simulator integration Paderborn University, Germany Towards an intelligent design support framework balancing risks and user experience: a case study in pharmaceutical packaging University of Malta, Malta Touch experience framework for a data-informed design of textile surfaces 1: Hochschule Niederrhein University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 2: Intended Future, Sweden; 3: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Identifying the right BOM setup in engineer-to-order companies: a focus identification model Technical University of Denmark, Denmark |
D243: DECISION SUPPORT IN COMPLEX DESIGN CONTEXTS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Francesca Montagna, Politecnico di Torino, Italy Why cost estimation matters for design decisions in the early phases of product development and what practitioners expect from artificial intelligence 1: Institute of Industrial Manufacturing and Management IFF, University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2: Fraunhofer IPA, Germany Co-designing responses to stakeholder misalignments in a complex infrastructure project: a design science approach Twente University, The Netherlands Designing a decision tool to decide between two support methods for culture-sensitive creative problem-solving IPEK - Institute of Product Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Decide-Adapt-Reuse: a decision framework to reuse or adapt metamodels for new clinch joint designs Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany |
| D244: DESIGN COGNITION STUDIES Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Niccolo Becattini, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Comparing neural patterns of high and low performers in adapted alternate-use design tasks for idea generation 1: Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Toronto, Canada; 2: Psychological and Brain Sciences, Drexel University, United States of America Neurocognitive assessment of generative AI on designers’ creative cognition: evidence from biologically inspired design tasks 1: Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi, India; 2: Politecnico di Milano, Italy The impact of social condition on design cognition: a mixed-methods analysis of individual and group-based design processes School of Design, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China) Structuring the design space while exploring it: a cognitive perspective on design space exploration Université de Bordeaux, ESTIA-Institute of Technology, EstiaR, France |
D245: METHODS AND TOOLS FOR DESIGN FOR ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Christer W. Elverum, NTNU, Norway AI as a copilot: novice perceptions of expert support in early design for additive manufacturing University of Rostock, Germany An iterative investigation of needs and barriers in deciding when to design for additive manufacturing 1: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; 2: The Open University, United Kingdom A conceptual tool to support the ecodesign of additively manufactured products Università degli Studi della Tuscia, Italy Exploring TRIZ contradiction analysis in design for additive manufacturing: insights from expert interviews 1: University of the Bundeswehr Munich, Germany; 2: TRIZ Consulting Group GmbH, Germany |
D246: ADVANCED VISUALISATION AND IMMERSIVE TECHNOLOGIES IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Eui Chul Jung, Seoul National University, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Mobile vs. head-mounted AR for learning additive manufacturing and supporting design creativity 1: Arts et Métiers Institute of Technology, LCPI, France; 2: Arts et Métiers Institute of Technology, LISPEN, France Towards 4D instructions: augmented reality assistance for knowledge transfer University of Antwerp, Belgium A systematic review of myopia compensation techniques in HMDs Ostfalia University of Applied Sciences, Germany Evolving design education: mapping the integration of emerging technologies 1: École Supérieure des Technologies et des Affaires (ESTA), France; 2: Université Marie et Louis Pasteur (UMLP), ELLIADD Laboratory (U.R. n°4661), Belfort, France |
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| 4:15pm - 4:30pm |
D2-TB2: Transition Break |
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| 4:30pm - 6:00pm |
D252: Meeting 1: HOW MODERN DESIGN WORKFLOWS ARE CHANGING WITH CLOUD-NATIVE CAD Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Dragos Alexandru Cazacu, PTC, United Kingdom HOSTED BY ONSHAPE/PTC |
D253: Meeting 2: AI AND PUBLISHING SCIENTIFIC PAPERS: A DISCUSSION WITH DESIGN JOURNAL EDITORS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Panos Y. Papalambros, University of Michigan, United States of America Chair: Anja Maier, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom HOSTED BY DESIGN SCIENCE JOURNAL |
D254: Meeting 3: DS MENTORING PROGRAM MEETING Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Julie Stal-Le Cardinal, CentraleSupélec, France Chair: Sophie I. Hallstedt, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden HOSTED BY DS MENTORING PROGRAM |
| D255: Meeting 4: DS DFAM SIG COMMUNITY MEETING Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Tino Stanković, ETH Zurich, Switzerland HOSTED BY DS DESIGN FOR ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING SIG |
D256: Meeting 5: PHYSICAL SPACES IN THE DIGITAL ERA: BUILDING LIVING LABS FOR AI-ENABLED SUSTAINABLE DEIGN Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Filippo Chiarello, Università di Pisa, Italy Chair: Vito Giordano, Università di Pisa, Italy HOSTED BY ERASMUS+ DETAILLS PROJECT |
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| 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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| 8:00am - 8:45am |
D4-R: Registration |
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| 8:45am - 9:45am |
D411: DESIGN STRATEGIES FOR SUSTAINABILITY TRANSITIONS Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Christian Köhler, Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft des Saarlandes (htw saar), Germany Leveraging repair services as systemic interventions in sustainable fashion University of Antwerp, Belgium Mapping opportunities for systemic redesign: insights from the circular economy diagnosis of the Brazilian food-service sector 1: Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil; 2: Vaus Consultoria, Brazil; 3: Trashin, Brazil Exploratory study of the integrations of low-tech approaches for sustainability in industrial contexts 1: Université de Bordeaux, CNRS, Bordeaux INP, I2M, UMR 5295, France; 2: Arts et Metiers Institute of Technology, CNRS, Bordeaux INP, I2M, UMR 5295, France; 3: UTOPII, CNRS, AMU, ENSAM, ENPC, INSA Lyon, Sorbonne Université, France; 4: Research Unit InSyTE, University of Technology of Troyes, France; 5: Arts et Métiers Institute of Technology, LCPI, France Mitigate product obsolescence by design: exploratory review of adaptability, upgradability and flexibility Department of Product Development, Faculty of Design Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium |
D412: LLM-ENABLED DESIGN METHODS AND ENGINEERING PROCESSES Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Vito Giordano, Università di Pisa, Italy ISOprep: an LLM-driven pipeline for semantics-preserving processing of neutralized requirements according to ISO 29148 Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany Evaluating TRIZ with and without LLM support: an experimental study on engineering problem-solving 1: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia; 2: Department of Design Sciences, Lund University, Sweden; 3: ENSAM, University of Moulay Ismail, Morocco; 4: Mathematics, Computer Science and Engineering Department, University of Quebec at Rimouski, Canada Discover the use of multimodal language models for idea detailing in human-AI collaborative design University of Exeter, United Kingdom Structure-based similarity searches to improve the reuse of assemblies and functional units in plant engineering – use cases and implementation verification with a large language model as a search tool 1: VON ARDENNE GmbH, Germany; 2: Dresden University of Technology, Germany |
D413: INCLUSIVE AND WELLBEING-DRIVEN DESIGN FOR HEALTHCARE Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: P. John Clarkson, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Embodied inclusion: re-materialising digital interaction for age-inclusive design University of Antwerp, Belgium Designing for subjective well-being: a VDL canvas and insight cards for exploring positive user experiences UNIST, South Korea A review of web-based toolkits for health and care design and improvement: preliminary results 1: Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands; 2: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Computational design tools for occupational therapists: a framework for integrating assistive technology design, customization, and prescription 1: Georgia Institute of Technology, United States of America; 2: Vidiponta Research, United States of America |
| D414: KNOWLEDGE INTEGRATION AND METHODS IN MODEL-BASED SYSTEMS ENGINEERING Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Nikola Bursac, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Semantic fusion of SysML elements for model integration utilizing knowledge graphs 1: Clausthal University of Technology, Germany; 2: L3S Research Center, Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany System architecture margins for the ilities 1: Department of Mechanical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden; 2: Department of Integrated Design and IRC for Smart Mobility and Logistics, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, Saudi Arabia Navigating the landscape of MBSE methodologies: a comparative study of ISO 15288 technical process coverage École de technologie supérieure, Canada A systematic literature review on AI-driven systems engineering assistants and the use of interaction design 1: Paderborn University, Germany; 2: Fraunhofer Institute for Mechatronic Systems Design, Germany |
D415: UNDERSTANDING INTERACTION AND USER DYNAMICS IN SERVICE DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Nuša Fain, Carleton University, Canada Interaction dynamics for service design: simulating context sharing through collective improvisational dance 1: Kyushu University, Japan; 2: Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, G-SCOP, France Assessing induction programme as a service: reflections on assessing organisational services through service design lens Tata Consultancy Services, India Cluster typologies of urban mobility users and their implications for the acceptance of autonomous buses: evidence from a large-scale online survey 1: Institute for Engineering Design and Industrial Design, University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2: Department of Social Sciences, Social Research Center, TU Dortmund University, Germany Toward modeling relational expectation misalignments in care: an exploratory extension of the theory of planned behavior for design Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan |
D416: DESIGN METHODS AND PEDAGOGY Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Joshua Summers, The University of Texas at Dallas, United States of America Making inclusion actionable in design studio teaching: a practice-oriented framework for developing inclusive designers Iowa State University, United States of America Developing design method as teaching tools: the dual role of design methods in practice and pedagogy Aalto Design Factory, Aalto University, Finland What’s the big IDEA? Co-designing engineering outreach with inclusivity, diversity, equity and accessibility in mind 1: University of Bristol, United Kingdom; 2: Bristol Robotics Lab, United Kingdom Challenges in understanding, using, and teaching design methods: perspectives of design educators Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India |
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| 9:45am - 10:15am |
D4-RB1: Refreshment Break |
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| 10:15am - 11:15am |
D421: METHODS FOR CIRCULAR AND SUSTAINABLE DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Ola Isaksson, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden The design for recycling of electronics guide: from recycling practice to design method Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands Set-based design approach for renewable energy integration in social housing: design space mapping with a morphological chart 1: Université de Bordeaux, ESTIA-Institute of Technology, EstiaR, France; 2: Comité Ouvrier du Logement (COL), France Bayesian optimal experimental design for circular business models The University of Tokyo, Japan Towards a methodical framework for the design of functional surfaces in circular automotive engineering 1: Institute for Engineering Design, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany; 2: Institute for Surface Technology, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany |
D422: GENERATIVE AI FOR DESIGN SYNTHESIS AND ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: James Gopsill, University of Bristol, United Kingdom From geometry to function: towards context-aware generative AI for engineering design 1: Dresden University of Technology, Germany; 2: MAN Truck & Bus SE, Germany; 3: Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Achievable mechanical performance of generatively designed PA6-CF and PLA components fabricated by desktop material extrusion Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Structured prompting for design for multi-X: evaluating LLM support in early prosthetic device design University of Malta, Malta In search for working principles using large language models: an experimental study 1: Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; 2: University of Rostock, Germany; 3: Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin, Germany |
D423: HUMAN–AI INTERACTION AND COMMUNICATION IN ENGINEERING DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Arlindo Silva, SUTD, Singapore Verbal communication in synchronous collaborative CAD activities: empirical evidence from AI-supported teams University of Zagreb Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture, Croatia How would engineers use LLMs for assembly search if they could? – An empirical study for fostering generative AI-driven design reuse in the future 1: University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2: Robert Bosch Manufacturing Solutions GmbH, Germany Engineering design through dialogue: a method for analysing speech-based human-AI conversation University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Design and evaluation of an AI-based application to enhance creativity in design thinking workshops 1: Ritsumeikan University, Japan; 2: Smart Process Co., Ltd., Japan |
| D424: MODEL-BASED SYSTEMS ENGINEERING FOR ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT INTEGRATION Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Eduardo Zancul, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil Quality criteria of transdisciplinary engineering design for dealing with wicked problems in design for sustainability and systems transitions 1: Institute for Design Engineering & Drive Technology, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany; 2: CIMTT Centre of Production Engineering and Management, Dresden University of Technology, Germany The design of a MBSE enabled ecodesign approach: case of application at a Dutch radar system developer 1: University of Twente, The Netherlands; 2: Thales Nederland B.V., The Netherlands Using model-based systems engineering (MBSE) and SysML for integrated sustainable manufacturing 1: Technical University of Applied Sciences Wildau, Germany; 2: Technische Universität Berlin, Germany An MBSE approach for integrating and computing LCA impact indicators within SysML models Ruhr University Bochum, Germany |
D425: USER AND CONSUMER PERCEPTION IN PRODUCT DESIGN AND USE Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Monica Bordegoni, Politecnico di Milano, Italy Garment longevity through quality perception: bridging subjective and objective quality 1: Product Development, Faculty of Design Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium; 2: Marketing, Faculty of Business and Economy, University of Antwerp, Belgium Attributes in context: a qualitative study of user understanding and misinterpretations in product design Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Italy Investigating consumer behaviour and incentives for slow-the-loop R-strategies in the bicycle industry 1: Paderborn University, Germany; 2: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Germany; 3: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany One shape fits all? Exploring how standardised packaging influences brand heritage and consumer perception University of Twente, The Netherlands |
D426: LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS AND APPROACHES IN ENGINEERING DESIGN EDUCATION Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Ahmed Kovacevic, City ST George's, University of London, United Kingdom Application of an engineering approach to the design of a learning system 1: ICUBE Laboratory, Université de Strasbourg, France; 2: ICUBE Laboratory, INSA Strasbourg, France Establishing an adaptive e-learning environment in engineering design education Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany Integrating sustainability perspectives into traditional technical courses in Danish design engineering education Aalborg University Copenhagen, Denmark A pedagogical tool for the co-design of systemic nature-based solutions applied to carbon removal 1: Arts et Métiers Institute of Technology, LCPI, France; 2: Stellantis, France |
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| 11:15am - 11:30am |
D4-TB1: Transition Break |
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| 11:30am - 12:30pm |
D431: CIRCULAR DESIGN FRAMEWORKS, TOOLS AND LONGEVITY STRATEGIES Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Jeremy Faludi, TU Delft, Netherlands, The Towards a reference architecture for digital product passports in engineering 1: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany; 2: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany Inside and outside perspectives on design for circularity: barriers across design producers, consultancies and SMEs Lund University, Sweden A circular economy-oriented early design and optimization approach for structural components of rechargeable energy storage systems 1: Institute for Engineering Design, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany; 2: ARRK Engineering GmbH, Germany; 3: Institute of Machine Tools and Production Technology, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany The longevity trinity: a review and framework conceptualisation of design strategies and attributes for value retention and extended furniture life Linköping University, Sweden |
D432: AI-DRIVEN KNOWLEDGE AND DECISION SUPPORT IN PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Martin Steinert, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Graph retrieval-augmented generation for enhancing LLM-based ML algorithm recommendation in product development University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany A data-driven approach to studying dominant designs through patent images 1: Università di Pisa, Italy; 2: Business Engineering for Data Science (B4DS) research group, Italy; 3: Coesia, Italy AI-based scenario management for SMEs: the need for modular, explainable and reusable foresight pipelines 1: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany; 2: Paderborn University, Germany AI-supported variant management activities – insights from an industrial case study 1: Institute for Engineering Design and Industrial Design, University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2: PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS ORGANISATION MUST BE REMOVED IN ALL MATERIALS |
D433: HUMAN-CENTRED ASPECTS OF AI Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Yuan Yin, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Contextualizing sensor data: integrating user voice in data-driven design INDEX, Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy, University of Exeter, United Kingdom Interactive visualisation of collaborative dynamics: a VLM-based approach for behavior and affect analysis 1: Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2: Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Germany Designing for dignity: a sociotechnical framework for AI-mediated systems University of Utah, United States of America Comparing human, LLM, and LLM-QFD approaches to technical requirement extraction 1: Sprott School of Business, Carleton University, Canada; 2: Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia |
| D434: MODEL-BASED DESIGN AND SIMULATION FOR RESOURCE-EFFICIENT SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Alexander Koch, University of the Bundeswehr Munich, Germany AI-supported implementation of reuse strategies in SysML v2: an MBSE approach using the example of a 3D printer RPTU University Kaiserslautern-Landau, Germany Utilisation of SysML models in the lifecycle of remanufacturable products 1: University of Zagreb Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture, Croatia; 2: Technische Universität Ilmenau, Germany; 3: Clausthal University of Technology, Germany A simulation framework for evaluating fast charging and battery swapping strategies in electric construction machinery 1: University of Bergamo, Italy; 2: Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden Assessing the effects of product family design strategies on resource consumption and costs: an extended axiomatic design approach Hamburg University of Technology, Germany |
D435: BEHAVIOURAL DESIGN METHODS AND APPLICATIONS Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Jiwon Jung, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, The From reliance to release: designing a behaviourally informed pacifier through an extended double diamond process 1: Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, University of the Arts Singapore (NAFA-UAS), Singapore; 2: Orthodontist, Private Practice, Singapore The change factory: a systematic behavioral design methodology for sustainable product experiences 1: L'Oréal R&I Evaluation Intelligence, France; 2: L'Oréal Packaging Engineering, France; 3: L'Oréal Luxe Sustainability, France Creativity in behavioural design: assessing idea characteristics using the Behavioural Design Space as creative assessment framework 1: Technical University of Denmark, Denmark; 2: Northumbria University, United Kingdom; 3: Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands When life changes, space should too: participatory insights into designing for residential flexibility across life stages Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India |
D436: HUMAN FACTORS IN DESIGN EDUCATION Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Stanko Škec, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia Future engineering workforce – industry-aligned systems engineering education at the Digital Lifecycle Lab 1: Institute of Machine Components and Methods of Development, Graz University of Technology, Austria; 2: Science, Academics & Transfer, Siemens Industry Software GmbH, Germany; 3: Chair of Engineering Design, Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Design exercises as confidence equalizers: differences in confidence between male and female students Harvey Mudd College, United States of America Exploring the link between students’ Big5 personality test and design project performance 1: Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore; 2: Independent scholar Identifying barriers and needs for inclusive remote laboratories: a mixed-methods study Ostfalia University of Applied Sciences, Germany |
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| 12:30pm - 2:00pm |
D4-L: Lunch Location: Restaurant Cavtat |
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| 2:00pm - 2:45pm |
D4-P: Plenary Session 3 Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Julie Stal-Le Cardinal, CentraleSupélec, France INCLUSIVE DESIGN: WHO TO INCLUDE? Dr Hua Dong Professor of Design, Director of Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design, Acting Pro-Vice Chancellor, Research & Innovation, Royal College of Art |
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| 2:45pm - 3:15pm |
D4-RB2: Refreshment Break |
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| 3:15pm - 4:15pm |
D441: AI METHODS FOR SUSTAINABLE DESIGN AND CIRCULARITY Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Stefan Zorn, University of Rostock, Germany Bridging LCA and design: an LLM-driven pipeline for generating sustainable design alternatives from LCA hotspot analysis 1: HELLA GmbH & Co. KGaA, Germany; 2: Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany AI-assisted leading sustainability criteria development: a multiple case study Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden Human-AI collaboration for repair: designing interactive tools for sustainable consumer electronics Royal College of Art, United Kingdom Large language models for identifying repurposing opportunities: a systematic evaluation University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany |
D442: MACHINE LEARNING FOR GENERATIVE DESIGN AND DESIGN SPACE EXPLORATION Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Tomislav Martinec, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia A deep reinforcement learning approach for the multi-objective, segment-based generative design of sheet metal components Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Generating vehicle designs using probabilistic programs and reinforcement learning 1: Computer Science Laboratory, SRI International, United States of America; 2: Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Stanford University, United States of America; 3: University of Florida, United States of America Reinforcement learning for the design of mechanisms using available bars and pins Engineering Design and Computing Laboratory, Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Comparison of evolutionary, reinforcement and active learning for simulation-based design space exploration 1: RPTU University Kaiserslautern-Landau, Germany; 2: University of Mannheim, Germany; 3: EIGNER engineering consult, Germany |
D443: DESIGN METHODS AND PROCESSES IN PRACTICE Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Kilian Gericke, University of Rostock, Germany Literature-based characterization of SME product development processes 1: Institute for Engineering Design, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany; 2: Battery Lab Facory Braunschweig, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany; 3: Institute of Thermodynamics, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany Developing and validating a user-centric information structure for design methods Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India Rethinking design methods in the age of AI – consequences for practice, education, and research Clausthal University of Technology, Germany Dual-advocate reflection cards: supporting multifaceted and critical reflection on the design process Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan |
| D444: DESIGNING FUTURE MOBILITY SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Dorian Marjanović, University of Zagreb FSB, Croatia Designing a modular platform of flying cars for diverse demands 1: City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China); 2: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States of America No driver needed? A perspective from standards, laws and regulations on autonomous transit buses Institute for Engineering Design and Industrial Design, University of Stuttgart, Germany Insights from knowledge-based engineering in industrial practice – a Saab’s perspective 1: Saab AB, Aeronautics, Sweden; 2: Department of Management and Engineering, Linköping University, Sweden Demographic profile and usage behavior of public transport users in the Munich Metropolitan Region: findings from a large-scale online survey on current and autonomous transit 1: Institute for Engineering Design and Industrial Design, University of Stuttgart, Germany; 2: Department of Social Sciences, Social Research Center, TU Dortmund University, Germany |
D445: ORGANISATIONAL AND VALUE MANAGEMENT IN COMPLEX DESIGN SYSTEMS Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Alessandro Bertoni, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden Identifying challenges and limitations of interface modeling in multi-brand product engineering processes University of Stuttgart, Germany The static vs. dynamism paradox in value-driven design: a descriptive study of value management challenges in complex system design 1: UTC - Université de Technologie de Compiègne, France; 2: Ikos Lab, France How to select stakeholders for participatory design of social robots: a systematic approach Atilim University, Turkey 12 roles for the organisational design of data-driven product management 1: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany; 2: OWL University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Germany; 3: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany |
D446: TEAM DYNAMICS AND AGILE PRACTICES IN PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Anita Friis Sommer, Aarhus University, Denmark Rethinking daily stand-ups: AI analysis to identify improvement potentials in agile development teams ISEM - Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Agile alignment in production system development processes Jönköping University, Sweden Teamflow in product development teams: designing resilient engineering environments ISEM - Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Decisive design: how spatial arrangements shape group decision-making 1: Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2: Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Germany |
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| 4:15pm - 4:30pm |
D4-TB2: Transition Break |
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| 4:30pm - 5:30pm |
D451: DESIGN FOR SUSTAINABILITY APPLICATIONS Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Gwenola Yannou-Le Bris, UMR sayfood, France Who drives sustainability in product design? A case study in aerospace 1: GKN Aerospace, Sweden; 2: Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Pure mycelium performance within the design process: an exploratory literature review on the state-of-the-art 1: Faculty of Design Sciences, University of Antwerp, Belgium; 2: Department of Architectural Engineering, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium Modelling reuse potential of building end-of-life components: a territorial approach 1: Centre Scientifique et Technique du Bâtiment, France; 2: CentraleSupélec, France Effects of design decisions on sustainability in product development: a case study for machine tools 1: ISEM - Institute for Smart Engineering and Machine Elements, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany; 2: TRUMPF SE + Co. KG, Germany; 3: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany |
D452: AI METHODS FOR GEOMETRIC MODELS AND DESIGN DATA Location: Conference Hall Bobara Chair: Kristin Paetzold-Byhain, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany AI-enhanced computer-aided design: predictive modelling of operations 1: Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2: BMW Group, Germany; 3: University of Passau, Germany Characterizing geometric variability of industrial 3D models to guide preparation of synthetic datasets for machine learning applications 1: University of Zagreb Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture, Croatia; 2: Neo Dens Ltd., Croatia Automatic feature recognition from imperfect models using a novel workflow of data surrogation 1: University of Bristol, United Kingdom; 2: Dresden University of Technology, Germany Entity matching for recurring engineering components: a bottom-up enabler for reference architecture reconstruction 1: Fraunhofer IEM, Germany; 2: Heinz Nixdorf Institute, Paderborn University, Germany |
D453: ANALYTICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN ENGINEERING DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 1 Chair: Shayne Gooch, University of Canterbury, New Zealand Proposing a PLM architecture framework for consistency in the engineering of machine tools 1: Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany; 2: TRUMPF SE + Co. KG, Germany Utilizing form-finding in mechanical engineering design using basic structural FEA Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria A key indicator for integral vs differential design of battery packs in battery electric vehicles under structural dynamic loads Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany Integrating manufacturing constraints in existing generative design workflows: wall thickness and cooling channel considerations 1: University of Bayreuth, Germany; 2: Technical University of Munich, Germany; 3: Fraunhofer IGCV, Germany |
| D454: AUTOMATION APPOACHES IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Orlando 2 Chair: Roland Lachmayer, Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany Enhancing design adaptation through an information-enriched reinforcement learning state Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Exploration of new actions that could be introduced to workflows for computer-aided form creation 1: James Watt School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom; 2: DMEM, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom; 3: TUM School of Engineering and Design, Technical University of Munich, Germany; 4: Glasgow School of Psychological Sciences & Health, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom Compatibility-optimized selection of solution principles using mixed-integer linear programming Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany Automated quantitative functional decomposition in product design Helmut Schmidt University, Germany |
D455: DESIGN THINKING AND CREATIVE APPROACHES FOR FUTURES Location: Conference Hall Konavle Chair: Georgi V. Georgiev, University of Oulu, Finland Towards a framework for stimuli in interpreting and envisioning society in collaborative design futuring 1: Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan; 2: University of Oulu, Finland Designing for well-being: a wearable prototype supporting emotional regulation through immersive multisensory interaction Politecnico di Milano, Italy ADT: a digital card-based toolkit for AI-augmented design thinking 1: Imperial College London, United Kingdom; 2: Goldsmiths, University of London, United Kingdom |
D456: MODELLING AND EXPLORING INTERACTIONS IN DESIGN Location: Conference Hall Šipun Chair: Philip Farrugia, University of Malta, Malta Language games in prosthetic design framing: a Wittgensteinian framework 1: Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore; 2: Institut Teknologi Bandung, Indonesia Towards user-product interaction prediction with musculoskeletal human models: a methodological comparison for posture prediction Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Food for thought: exploring the future of food through AI-supported design fictions Linköping University, Sweden The shape of teamwork: visualising collective design dynamics through synergy bands 1: Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, University of the Arts Singapore (NAFA-UAS), Singapore; 2: Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore; 3: Singapore Management University, Singapore |
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| 5:30pm - 5:45pm |
D4-TB3: Transition Break |
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| 5:45pm - 6:30pm |
D4-C: Closing Session Location: Conference Hall Ragusa Chair: Tim C. McAloone, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
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| 8:00pm - 10:00pm |
D4-FP: Farewell Party |
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