Understanding the Use of Bio-Inspired Design Tools by Industry Professionals

Bio-inspired design (BID) has the potential to evolve the way engineers and designers solve problems. Several tools have been developed to assist one or multiple phases of the BID process. These tools, typically studied individually and through the performance of college students, have yielded inter...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Noah Pentelovitch, Jacquelyn K. Nagel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-05-01
Series:Biomimetics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-7673/7/2/63
Description
Summary:Bio-inspired design (BID) has the potential to evolve the way engineers and designers solve problems. Several tools have been developed to assist one or multiple phases of the BID process. These tools, typically studied individually and through the performance of college students, have yielded interesting results for increasing the novelty of solutions. However, not much is known about the likelihood of the tools being integrated into the design and development process of established companies. The mixed-methods study presented in this paper seeks to address this gap by providing industry engineers and designers hands-on training with the BID process and four BID tools. Understanding which tools are valued and could be adopted in an industry context is the goal. The results indicate multiple encouraging outcomes including that industry practitioners highly valued the process framework tool (BID canvas) as it allows for flexibility in tool use, as well as valued learning with a suite of BID tools rather than a single one to accommodate different workflows and ways of thinking.
ISSN:2313-7673