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- Experience
with an
approach to
comparing
software
design
methodologies: Software
Engineering,
IEEE
Transactions
on, Vol. 20,
No. 5. (1994),
pp.
364-384.Introd
uces a
systematic and
defined
process called
?comparison of
design
methodologies?
(CDM) for
objectively
comparing
software
design
methodologies
(SDMs). We
believe that
using CDM will
lead to
detailed,
traceable, and
objective
comparisons.
CDM uses
process
modeling
techniques to
model SDMs,
classify their
components,
and analyze
their
procedural
aspects.
Modeling the
SDMs entails
decomposing
their methods
into
components and
analyzing the
structure and
functioning of
the
components.
The
classification
of the
components
illustrates
which
components
address
similar design
issues and/or
have similar
structures.
Similar
components
then may be
further
modeled to aid
in more
precisely
understanding
their
similarities
and
differences.
The models of
the SDMs are
also used as
the bases for
conjectures
and analyses
about the
differences
between the
SDMs. This
paper
describes
three
experiments
that we
carried out in
evaluating
CDM. The first
uses CDM to
compare
Jackson System
Development
(JSD) and
Booch's (1986)
object-oriente
d design. The
second uses
CDM to compare
two other
pairs of SDMs.
The last one
compares some
of our
comparisons
with other
comparisons
done in the
past using
different
approaches.
The results of
these
experiments
demonstrate
that process
modeling is
valuable as a
powerful tool
in analysis of
software
development
approaches
Source: Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on, Vol. 20, No. 5. (1994), pp. 364-384. - Secure
attribute-base
d systems: (2006), pp.
99-112.
Source: (2006), pp. 99-112. - Using
Attribute-Base
d Access
Control to
Enable
Attribute-Base
d Messaging: (2006), pp.
403-413.
Source: (2006), pp. 403-413. - PolicyMorph:
interactive
policy
transformation
s for a
logical
attribute-base
d access
control
framework: (2007), pp.
205-214.
Source: (2007), pp. 205-214. - Conceptual
Flexibility in
the Human
Brain: Dynamic
Recruitment of
Semantic Maps
from Visual,
Motor, and
Motion-related
Areas: J. Cogn.
Neurosci.,
Vol. 20, No.
10. (1 October
2008), pp.
1799-1814.Trad
itionally,
concepts are
assumed to be
situational
invariant
mental
knowledge
entities
(conceptual
stability),
which are
represented in
a unitary
brain system
distinct from
sensory and
motor areas
(amodality).
However,
accumulating
evidence
suggests that
concepts are
embodied in
perception and
action in that
their
conceptual
features are
stored within
modality-speci
fic semantic
maps in the
sensory and
motor cortex.
Nonetheless,
the first
traditional
assumption of
conceptual
stability
largely
remains
unquestioned.
Here, we
tested the
notion of
flexible
concepts using
functional
magnetic
resonance
imaging and
event-related
potentials
(ERPs) during
the
verification
of two
attribute
types (visual,
action-related
) for words
denoting
artifactual
and natural
objects.
Functional
imaging
predominantly
revealed
crossover
interactions
between
category and
attribute type
in visual,
motor, and
motion-related
brain areas,
indicating
that access to
conceptual
knowledge is
strongly
modulated by
attribute
type: Activity
in these areas
was highest
when
nondominant
conceptual
attributes had
to be
verified. ERPs
indicated that
these
category-attri
bute
interactions
emerged as
early as 116
msec after
stimulus
onset,
suggesting
that they
reflect rapid
access to
conceptual
features
rather than
postconceptual
processing.
Our results
suggest that
concepts are
situational-de
pendent mental
entities. They
are composed
of semantic
features which
are flexibly
recruited from
distributed,
yet localized,
semantic maps
in
modality-speci
fic brain
regions
depending on
contextual
constraints.
Source: J. Cogn. Neurosci., Vol. 20, No. 10. (1 October 2008), pp. 1799-1814. - Attributional
Thoughts about
Consumer
Behavior: Journal of
Consumer
Research, Vol.
27, No. 3. (1
December
2000), pp.
382-387.doi:
10.1086/317592
Two
fundamental
principles
from
attribution
theory were
examined for
the role they
might play in
the psychology
of the
consumer. They
are: (1)
perceptions of
causality
along a
stability
dimension
influence the
anticipated
likelihood of
product
satisfaction,
and (2)
perceptions of
causality
along a
controllabilit
y dimension
influence
judgments of
responsibility
and
retributive
actions.
Comments about
the longevity
of an
attributional
framework,
methodological
recommendation
s, and the
heuristic
value of the
theory also
are included.
Source: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol. 27, No. 3. (1 December 2000), pp. 382-387. - Product
personality in
physical
interaction: Design
Studies, Vol.
29, No. 5.
(September
2008), pp.
458-477.The
possibility of
designing
physical
human-product
interactions
with
predefined
personalities
was explored
in two
studies. In
the first
study, 60
participants
reported the
personality of
two devices
that were
developed to
be identical
in terms of
appearance and
different in
terms of
interaction
style, i.e.
dominant
versus
elegant. In
the second
study, 75
respondents
reported the
personality of
the same
devices but
this time with
a dominant
instead of a
neutral
appearance.
The results
indicated that
it was
possible to
design
interaction
devices with
different
personalities,
and that the
effect of
appearance is
stronger than
that of
interaction
style.
Source: Design Studies, Vol. 29, No. 5. (September 2008), pp. 458-477.
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