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the important concepts, in order to interact with their own mental representations. They will be in continuous interaction with their representations to make design decisions (Visser 2006). The process thus consists of alternating actions and judgments. The designer’s actions can produce unexpected results; the feedback is likely to suggest concepts. Tools that encourage spontaneity, that is, natural gestures and letting go, are the most likely to generate feedback and will then tend to stimulate reflection, reflective conversation, and thus improve ideation (Schön 1983). An external representation constructed in a design process is considered to be a cognitive artifact of designing (Visser 2006) in the sense that this artifact contains knowledge, or at least information that is intended to be re-mobilized by the designer or their partners. When the designer does not have the experience to mentally visualize and solve design problems, or when the problem is too complex, these cognitive artifacts are essential to the ideation process.

      1.4.2. Types of representation

      Reflective conversation will generally be more important in the early stages of design. Goel (1995) describes the design process as an evolution of different types of representations. For each stage, a particular type of representation is used for specific tasks. During the ideation stage, a first type of representation consisting of freehand sketches or physical models is mobilized to externalize and visualize design intentions or to communicate them with others. These first representations are what Goldschmidt (1992) calls idea-sketches. Later in the process, presentation sketches appear, in the form of digital 3D models, drawings or images, to improve communicating asynchronously with colleagues and clients about the proposals. At the end of the process appear the representations composed of detailed technical drawings and rapid prototyping models to communicate the exact and definitive information to build the product. During these three successive steps, the representations are likely to be mobilized during synchronous, but especially asynchronous collaborations with other designers or customers. For example, team ideation requires cognitive artifacts adapted to different visualization capacities, and these artifacts must also be manipulated in an intuitive way.

      The traditional engineering approach is to consider the drawing on paper as a draft that will be followed by work on a Computer-Aided Design (CAD) tool. However, there are certain restrictions imposed by CAD tools that, in the early stages of design, will hinder creativity, especially by generating fixation. The importance of sketching as a means of supporting visual reasoning was first highlighted in 1980 by McKim, who spoke of idea-sketching. Indeed, the designer’s conceptualization activity is limited, in particular, by his or her memory capacities. On average, short-term memory is limited to seven chunks of information (Miller 1956). In the case of the design of a technical object, a chunk corresponds to a characteristic of the product. Technical experts in this product category are then able to put more information in each chunk than novices (Ullman 2003). The quick sketch, the idea-sketch, is a way to externalize these chunks, making these sketches an extension of short-term memory. Thus, improving sketching skills, or improving the sketching tool, will help to store more information through these visualizations and will thus reduce the duration of the ideation phase.

      1.4.3. Conditions for the effectiveness of sketches

      Sketches in a design project, to be effective, must possess a number of characteristics identified by Buxton (2007):

       – quick to achieve, so as not to interfere with the creative process;

       – done at the right time, sketches are useful when a designer needs to externalize a mental representation, for a reflective conversation, or to communicate their ideas, preferably in the upstream phases of design;

       – inexpensive, because it is a matter of allowing for mistakes, corrections, changes of ideas, adjustments;

       – disposable, the investment in a sketch is the concept and not the sketch itself (normally, several sketches are made quickly and all of them are kept, which implies that one should never find a sketch by itself);

       – understandable, because the communicability of the idea depends on it;

       – characterized by the freedom of the gesture, neither tightened nor too precise;

       – minimalist, only what is important to the concept, because technical details are distractors that tend to interfere with the ideation work (Rodgers et al. 2000);

       – with the appropriate degree of development; the sketch’s degree of development should match the idea’s degree of development so that designers are not fixated on details of the idea rather than its central features;

       – suggesting rather than telling, because the sketch is not the technical specification document that appears much later in CAD; suggesting leaves the user of the sketch a share of deductions to make, which may be conducive to finding solutions;

       – intentionally ambiguous, as one should not, in seeking to represent a specific concept on an object, fix all of the other characteristics of that object. It is better to remain ambiguous about those features of the object that are not central to this sketch (Tseng and Ball 2011).

      1.4.4. The phases of ideation

Schematic illustration of the model of the upstream phase of design.

      1.4.5. The right tools at the right time

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