Schneller, Annina (2015). Design Rhetoric: Studying the Effects of Designed Objects Nature and Culture, 10(3), pp. 333-356. 10.3167/nc.2015.100305
Full text not available from this repository. (Request a copy)Many of the ways in which artifacts appear to or actually do affect us-as elegant, dynamic, comfortable, authentic-are based on the fact that they are designed objects. Design is an effect-oriented process that resorts to design rules linking formal aspects of designed artifacts to specific design effects. Design rhetoric tries to capture these links between design techniques and resulting effects. This article presents design-rhetorical methods of identifying design rules of intersubjective validity. The new approach, developed at Bern University of the Arts, combines rhetorical design analysis with practice-oriented design research, based on the creation and empirical testing of design variants in accordance with effect hypotheses.
Item Type: |
Newspaper or Magazine Article |
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Division/Institute: |
Bern Academy of the Arts Bern Academy of the Arts > Institute of Design Research |
Name: |
Schneller, Annina |
ISSN: |
1558-5468 |
Language: |
English |
Submitter: |
Service Account |
Date Deposited: |
13 Aug 2019 15:12 |
Last Modified: |
07 Oct 2020 11:38 |
Publisher DOI: |
10.3167/nc.2015.100305 |
URI: |
https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/5605 |