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Published in: Research in Engineering Design 3/2013

01-07-2013 | Original Paper

Predicting topic shift locations in design histories

Authors: David Botta, Robert Woodbury

Published in: Research in Engineering Design | Issue 3/2013

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Abstract

Knowing the locations of weak-to-strong topic shifts in a design history enables hierarchical segmentation of that history. The segmentation can be the basis of hierarchical visualization, that is, semantic zoom, and more, such as visualization of co-location, co-citation, and density of linking. This research shows that a fine-grained, sub-topical linkograph of a design conversation can be used to identify the locations of topic shifts in that conversation. A design conversation spanning 11 design meetings was captured; deictic (pointing-like) references were simulated by performing a sentence-by-sentence-level linkograph analysis of the conversation (that is, the conversation was not subjectively aggregated to topical segments prior to analysis); an algorithm used the linkograph to predict the locations of topic shifts; and the linkograph-predicted topic shift locations were compared with expected topic shift locations for the same conversation. The expected topic shift locations were defined as the heads of reference series (references to transcript units) that were made in a detailed report about the meetings. The model performed well (63–80 %) on large reference series (quartiles three and four) and poorly on small reference series (quartiles one and two, and singular references). Future research will work with linkographs that are automatically constructed by both text-based and graphic design systems and aim to develop a framework that can adapt to individual histories.

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Footnotes
1
When we use the term researcher, we refer to this participant-observation role.
 
2
Terminology: model: algorithm plus linkograph.
 
3
TechOne (2002–2011) was a first-year experiential program at Simon Fraser University’s Surrey campus that aimed to prepare students for academic success. “… a program for anyone who is interested in design and technology and their integration within everyday life… ” (2008 Jan: http://​students.​surrey.​sfu.​ca/​techone).
 
4
“The Canadian Design Research Network (2005–2007) was a consortium of academics and partners from the private, public and non-governmental sectors aimed at improving design outcomes in Canadian society through research in design” (2008 Jan: http://​www.​cdrn.​ca/​).
 
5
Before the decimal point indicates the meeting. After the decimal point is an arbitrary rational number that permits the units to be ordered.
 
6
Calling text: A transcript unit that has one or more deep links.
 
7
Distillate: information that is culled, organized (concatenated, outlined, classified), and distilled. A distillate can replace the original information.
 
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Metadata
Title
Predicting topic shift locations in design histories
Authors
David Botta
Robert Woodbury
Publication date
01-07-2013
Publisher
Springer London
Published in
Research in Engineering Design / Issue 3/2013
Print ISSN: 0934-9839
Electronic ISSN: 1435-6066
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00163-012-0141-1

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