Litcius/Paper detail

Breaking up data-enabled design: expanding and scaling up for the clinical context

Renee Noortman, Peter Lövei, Mathias Funk, Eva Deckers, Stephan Wensveen, Berry Eggen

2022Artificial intelligence for engineering design analysis and manufacturing22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Data-enabled design (DED) is a promising new methodology for designing with users from within their own context in an iterative and hands-on fashion. However, the agile and flexible qualities of the methodology do not directly translate to every context. In this article, we reflect on the design process of an intelligent ecosystem, called ORBIT, and a proposed evaluative study planned with it. This was part of a DED project in collaboration with a medical hospital to study the post-operative behavior in the (remote) context of bariatric patients. The design and preparation of this project and the process towards an eventual study rejection from the medical ethical committee (METC) provide rich insights into (1) what it means to conduct DED research in a clinical context, and (2) where the boundaries of the method might lie in this specific application area. We highlight insights from carefully designing the substantial infrastructure for the study, and how different aspects of DED translated less easily to the clinical context. We analyze the proposed study setup through the lenses of several modifications we made to DED and further reflect on how to expand and scale up the methodology and adapt the process for the clinical context.

Topics & Concepts

Context (archaeology)Process (computing)Agile software developmentComputer scienceScale (ratio)Data scienceDesign processProcess managementKnowledge managementSystems engineeringEngineeringSoftware engineeringWork in processOperations managementPhysicsPaleontologyQuantum mechanicsBiologyOperating systemInnovative Human-Technology InteractionDigital Mental Health InterventionsMobile Health and mHealth Applications
Breaking up data-enabled design: expanding and scaling up for the clinical context | Litcius