Query returned 11501 results.
AMBIGUITY IS A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD: SIMILARITY REFERENCES IN COMMUNICATION
Eckert, C.; Stacey, M.; Earl, C. // 2003
AN AGENT BASED APPROACH TO FINDING EXPERTISE IN THE ENGINEERING DESIGN ENVIRONMENT
Crowder, R.; Hughes, G.; Hall, W. // 2003
AN AUTOMATED COST ESTIMATING SYSTEM FOR VARIANT DESIGN BASED ON THE METHOD OF SUCCESSIVE CALCULUS
Elgh, F.; Sunnersjö, S. // 2003
AN ECO-INNOVATIVE DESIGN METHOD BY GREEN QFD AND TRIZ TOOLS
Chen, J. L.; Liu, C-C // 2003
AN ELECTRONIC TUTOR FOR STRUCTURAL DISTILLATION
Field, B.; Burvill, C.; John Weir, J. // 2003
AN INFORMATION MODEL. FOR MECHATRONIC PRODUCTS FOCUSING ON EARLY DEVELOPMENT PHASES
Svensson, Daniel; Hallin, Karl; Zimmerman, Tiond; Malmqvist, Johan // 2003
In mechatronic product development, there is a lack of a common understanding among different engineering domains. One step towards improving this situation is to propose information models capable ...
AN INNOVATIVE NEW BASIC MODEL IN DESIGN METHODOLOGY FOR ANALYSIS AND SYNTHESIS OF TECHNICAL SYSTEMS
Albers, A.; Matthiesen, S.; Ohmer, M. // 2003
AN INTEGRATED APPROACH FOR INTRODUCING ECODESIGN INTO AN INDUSTRIAL COMPANY - FROM CUSTOMER DEMANDS TO AN ENVIROMENTAL PRODUCT DECLARATION
Wimmer, W.; Bey, N.; Malsch, A. // 2003
AN INTEGRATED ARCHITECTURE FOR FUNCTIONAL PRODUCTS
Sivard, G. // 2003
AN INTEGRATED ETHNOGRAPHIC AND EMPIRICAL METHODOLOGY IN A STUDY OF KNOWLEDGE SEARCHES IN AEROSPACE DESIGN
Langdon, P.; Aurisicchio, M.; Clarkson, P. J.; Wallace, K. // 2003
AN UML MODELING OF AN ARCHITECTURE FOR KNOWLEDGE DOCUMENTATION
Mekhilef, M.; Bourey, J. P.; Bigand, M. // 2003
ANALYSIS OF RISK AND TIME TO MARKET DURING THE CONCEPTUAL DESIGN OF NEW SYSTEMS
Hari, A.; Weiss, M. P. // 2003
ANALYSIS OF THE BALANCED SCORECARD FORMULATION PROCESS FOR SETTING UP ENGINEERING DESIGN PERFORMANCE METRICS
Acosta, L. M. C.; Trabasso, L. G.; Araújo, C. S. // 2003
APPLICATION SCENARIOS FOR CLASS-SYSTEMS IN PRODUCT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT
Puri, W.; Sander, S.; Meerkamm, H. // 2003
ARCHITECTING MODELS OF TECHNICAL SYSTEMS FOR NON-ROUTINE SIMULATIONS
Sellgren, U. // 2003
ARE DESIGNERS FULL EQUIPPED TO SUCCEED WITH NEW ENVIRONMENTAL REQUIREMENTS?.
Gómez Navarro, T.; Capuz Rizo, S.; Viñoles Cebolla, R.; López, García; Bastante Ceca, M. // 2003
ASKING GENERATIVE DESIGN QUESTIONS: A FUNDAMENTAL COGNITIVE MECHANISM IN DESIGN THINKING
Eris, Ö. // 2003
ASSEMBLY SYNTHESIS FOR OPTIMAL IN-PROCESS DIMENSIONAL ADJUSTABILITY BASED ON A JOINT LIBRARY
Lee, B.; Saitou, K. // 2003
ASSESSING INCLUSIVITY THROUGHOUT THE DESIGN PROCESS
Cardoso, C.; Keates, S.; Clarkson, P. J. // 2003
ASSESSMENT METHOD OF VALUE DISTRIBUTION FOR PRODUCT FAMILY DEPLOYMENT
Fujita, K.; Takagi, H.; Nakayama, T. // 2003
ASSISTING DESIGNERS IN EVALUATING PROPOS ED SOLUTIONS THROUGHOUT THE DESIGN PROCESS
Lonchampt, P.; Prudhomme, G.; Brissaud, D. // 2003
BARRIERS TO SHARED UNDERSTANDING IN COLLABORATIVE DESIGN PROJECTS
Kleinsmann, M.; Valkenburg, R. // 2003
BUSINESSPLAN APPROACH FOR NEW PRODUCTS
Hesselbach, J.; Broistedt, K-H; Lieu, D. K.; Mateika, M. // 2003
Boolean Searches
The following examples demonstrate some search strings that use boolean operators:
- design community
Find rows that contain at least one of the two words. - +design +community
Find rows that contain both words. - +design community
Find rows that contain the word “design”, but rank rows higher if they also contain “community”. - +design -community
Find rows that contain the word “design” but not “community”. - +design ~community
Find rows that contain the word “design”, but if the row also contains the word “community”, rate it lower than if row does not. - +design +(>community <decisions)
Find rows that contain the words “design” and “community”, or “design” and “decisions” (in any order), but rank “design community” higher than “design decisions” - design*
Find rows that contain words such as “design”, “designs”, “designing”, or “designer”. - "some words"
Find rows that contain the exact phrase “some words” (for example, rows that contain “some words of wisdom” but not “some noise words”). Note that the " characters that enclose the phrase are operator characters that delimit the phrase. They are not the quotation marks that enclose the search string itself.