TY - JOUR
T1 - Information hiding in product development
T2 - The design churn effect
AU - Yassine, Ali
AU - Joglekar, Nitin
AU - Braha, Dan
AU - Eppinger, Steven
AU - Whitney, Daniel
PY - 2003/11
Y1 - 2003/11
N2 - Execution of a complex product development project is facilitated through its decomposition into an interrelated set of localized development tasks. When a local task is completed, its output is integrated through an iterative cycle of system-wide integration activities. Integration is often accompanied by inadvertent information hiding due to the asynchronous information exchanges. We show that information hiding leads to persistent recurrence of problems (termed the design churn effect) such that progress oscillates between being on schedule and falling behind. The oscillatory nature of the PD process confounds progress measurement and makes it difficult to judge whether the project is on schedule or slipping. We develop a dynamic model of work transformation to derive conditions under which churn is observed as an unintended consequence of information hiding due to local and system task decomposition. We illustrate these conditions with a case example from an automotive development project and discuss strategies to mitigate design churn.
AB - Execution of a complex product development project is facilitated through its decomposition into an interrelated set of localized development tasks. When a local task is completed, its output is integrated through an iterative cycle of system-wide integration activities. Integration is often accompanied by inadvertent information hiding due to the asynchronous information exchanges. We show that information hiding leads to persistent recurrence of problems (termed the design churn effect) such that progress oscillates between being on schedule and falling behind. The oscillatory nature of the PD process confounds progress measurement and makes it difficult to judge whether the project is on schedule or slipping. We develop a dynamic model of work transformation to derive conditions under which churn is observed as an unintended consequence of information hiding due to local and system task decomposition. We illustrate these conditions with a case example from an automotive development project and discuss strategies to mitigate design churn.
KW - Component and system performance generation
KW - Decomposition and integration
KW - Design churn
KW - Design process modeling
KW - Information hiding
KW - Product development
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U2 - 10.1007/s00163-003-0036-2
DO - 10.1007/s00163-003-0036-2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:1842475377
SN - 0934-9839
VL - 14
SP - 145
EP - 161
JO - Research in Engineering Design
JF - Research in Engineering Design
IS - 3
ER -