A Dual-Process Analysis of Design Idea Generation

Author(s):  
Dylan Moore ◽  
Jonathan Sauder ◽  
Yan Jin

A traditional engineering education primarily teaches students to use analytical methods when solving problems, which are effective in most real-world situations. However, heavily analytical approaches often hinder creative output and therefore more intuitive methods have the potential to increase novelty in design. Dual-process theory is an established model in psychology and human decision making that separates fast, intuitive Type 1 processes from slow, analytical Type 2 processes, but to this point has not been applied to engineering design methodology. A exploratory dual-process pilot study of a design experiment using retrospective protocol analysis exposed the difference in novelty of ideas produced by intuitive and analytical thinking. The preliminary results suggest that Type 1 intuitive thinking is correlated with a higher average idea novelty up to a threshold. An equal balance of Type 1 and Type 2 thinking maximized novelty potential. Understanding this relationship and the importance of intuitive thinking in the design process is important to improving the effectiveness of conceptual design thinking and has implications in design education and modeling cognitive design processes.

1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (06) ◽  
pp. 731-736 ◽  
Author(s):  
M W Mansfield ◽  
M H Stickland ◽  
A M Carter ◽  
P J Grant

SummaryTo identify whether genotype contributes to the difference in PAI-1 levels in type 1 and type 2 diabetic subjects and whether genotype relates to the development of retinopathy, a Hind III restriction fragment length polymorphism and two dinucleotide repeat polymorphisms were studied. In 519 Caucasian diabetic subjects (192 type 1, 327 type 2) and 123 Caucasian control subjects there were no differences in the frequency of the Hind III restriction alleles (type 1 vs type 2 vs control: allele 1 0.397 vs 0.420 vs 0.448; allele 2 0.603 vs 0.580 vs 0.552) nor in the allelic frequency at either dinucleotide repeat sequence. In 86 subjects with no retinopathy at 15 years or more from diagnosis of diabetes and 190 subjects with diabetic retinopathy there was no difference in the frequency of Hind III restriction alleles (retinopathy present vs retinopathy absent: allele 1 0.400 vs 0.467; allele 2 0.600 vs 0.533) nor in the allelic frequencies at either dinucleotide repeat sequence. The results indicate that there is no or minimal influence of the PAI-1 gene on either PAI-1 levels or the development of diabetic retinopathy in patients with diabetes mellitus.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1959 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 1041-1062
Author(s):  
Stanley Alan Plotkin ◽  
Hilary Koprowski ◽  
Joseph Stokes

Forty-six infants, ranging from less than 1 day to 6 months of age, were given more than 100 feedings of living, attenuated poliomyelitis viruses without the occurrence of major or minor illness. The strains used were CHAT (type 1), Wistar (type 1), Jackson (type 2), P-712 (type 2) and Fox (type 3). All strains except the Jackson strain were found to be antigenic on oral administration. Response to vaccination was demonstrated in these infants by the presence after vaccination of antibody levels significantly in excess of those attributable to transplacentally acquired antibodies, and by the detection of fecal excretion of poliomyelitis virus. Infants less than 2 months old were more difficult to immunize than older infants. The evidence suggests that biologic immaturity rather than transplacental antibodies caused the difference. When the three types of poliomyelitis virus were fed at 3-week intervals, responses occurred to all types. No interference between types was observed when they were fed in all possible sequences. Three infants given a second feeding of homotypic, attenuated poliomyelitis virus 3 to 5 months after a successful vaccination showed resistance to intestinal reinfection.


1982 ◽  
Vol 104 (3) ◽  
pp. 257-261
Author(s):  
T. M. Kuzay ◽  
C. B. Panchal ◽  
A. P. Gavin

Heat-transfer monitors (HTMs) have been used since 1976 to measure the reduction in the seawater heat-transfer coefficient due to buildup of biofouling and corrosion products inside circular tubes of shell-and-tube heat exchangers being developed for ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) plants. For OTEC heat exchangers (HXs) with other tube geometries, special, modified HTMs, which we call STMs, are being sought. The analytical approaches and calibration results to date are summarized for STMs of two types: (i) an STM simulating a rectangular seawater passage in a compact, aluminum, plate-fin HX, and (ii) an STM for a helical stainless-steel tube. The development of type 1 has been successful. A software change is needed for type 2.


2000 ◽  
Vol 279 (1) ◽  
pp. R109-R117 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. Kerman ◽  
B. J. Yates ◽  
R. M. McAllen

To investigate the possibility that expression of vestibulosympathetic reflexes (VSR) is related to a nerve's anatomic location rather than its target organ, we compared VSR recorded from the same type of postganglionic fiber [muscle vasoconstrictor (MVC)] located at three different rostrocaudal levels: hindlimb, forelimb, and face. Experiments were performed on chloralose-anesthetized cats, and vestibular afferents were stimulated electrically. Single MVC unit activity was extracted by spike shape analysis of few-fiber recordings, and unit discrimination was confirmed by autocorrelation. Poststimulus time histogram analysis revealed that about half of the neurons were initially inhibited by vestibular stimulation (type 1 response), whereas the other MVC fibers were initially strongly excited (type 2 response). MVC units with types 1 and 2 responses were present in the same nerve fascicle. Barosensitivity was equivalent in the two groups, but fibers showing type 1 responses fired significantly faster than those giving type 2 responses (0.29 ± 0.04 vs. 0.20 ± 0.02 Hz). Nerve fibers with type 1 responses were most common in the hindlimb (21 of 29 units) and least common in the face (2 of 11 units), the difference in relative proportion being significant ( P < 0.05, χ2 test). These results support the hypothesis that VSR are anatomically patterned.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 393-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Calhoun ◽  
Terri Kang Johnson ◽  
Jonathan Hughes ◽  
David Price ◽  
Andrew K. Balo

Acetaminophen (APAP) can cause erroneously high readings in real-time continuous glucose monitoring (rtCGM) systems. APAP-associated bias in an investigational rtCGM system (G6) was evaluated by taking the difference in glucose measurements between rtCGM and YSI from 1 hour before to 6 hours after a 1-g oral APAP dose in 66 subjects with type 1 or type 2 diabetes. The interference effect was defined as the average post-dose (30-90 minutes) bias minus the average baseline bias for each subject. The clinically meaningful interference effect was defined as 10 mg/dL. The G6 system’s overall mean (±SD) interference effect was 3.1 ± 4.8 mg/dL (one-sided upper 95% CI = 4.1 mg/dL), significantly lower than 10 mg/dL. The G6 system’s resistance to APAP interference should provide reassurance to those using the drug.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3169-3169
Author(s):  
Koji Yada ◽  
Keiji Nogami ◽  
Kenichi Ogiwara ◽  
Katsumi Nishiya ◽  
Masahiro Takeyama ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3169 Poster Board III-110 Factor (F)VIIa with tissue factor (TF) is a primary trigger of blood coagulation. We have recently demonstrated that FVIIa/TF rapidly activated FVIII by proteolysis of the heavy chain (HCh), and served physiologically as a potent activator for up-regulation of FVIII activity in very early-timed phase (ASH #1036, 2008). FVIII inhibitors develop as alloantibodies in multi-transfused patients with hemophilia A and also arise as autoantibodies in normal individuals. FVIII inactivation by inhibitors is associated with impairment of FVIII(a) cofactor function through the binding to functional crucial epitopes in FVIII. Anti-C2 inhibitors prevent FVIII binding to phospholipid, von Willebrand factor, and FXa. Anti-A2 inhibitors prevent FVIII binding to FIXa and thrombin. However, effects of these inhibitors on FVIIa action for FVIII have remained to be studied. In this study, we prepared 13 of anti-FVIII inhibitor IgGs (2 of anti-A2, 7 of anti-C2 with type 1 behavior, and 4 of anti-C2 with type 2). We first examined FVIIa/TF-catalyzed FVIII activation in the presence of anti-FVIII inhibitors in one-stage clotting assay. The levels of FVIII activity (10 nM) elevated rapidly by ∼2.0-fold within 30 sec after adding of FVIIa/TF (1 nM), and subsequently decreased to the initial level within 20 min. The presence of anti-FVIII inhibitors did not significantly affect FVIIa/TF-catalyzed FVIII activation (by 1.7∼2.2-fold) compared to normal IgG. This action was independent of the difference of inhibitor epitopes. In addition, FVIIa-catalyzed FVIIIa inactivation with anti-A2 or anti-C2 with type 2 inhibitors was little affected, similar to that with normal IgG. However, of note, all of anti-C2 with type 1 significantly inhibited FVIIa-catalyzed inactivation of FVIIIa. Inactivation rates of FVIIa with anti-C2 with type 1 (k ∼0.15) was ∼40% less than that with control IgG (k ∼0.24), supporting that the presence of anti-C2 with type 1 might persist the activity of FVIIIa generated by FVIIa. To clarify this inhibitory mechanism of anti-C2 with type 1, we performed FVIIa-catalyzed FVIII cleavage in Western blotting. FVIIa/TF (1 nM) proteolyzed the HCh of FVIII (10 nM) rapidly by cleavages at Arg372 (and Arg740), whilst cleavage at Arg336 in the A1 domain was appeared at ∼2.5 min, supporting that cleavages at Arg372 and Arg336 by FVIIa contribute to the up- and down-regulation of FVIII(a) activity, respectively. All inhibitors, independent of recognizing epitopes, did not affect FVIIa-catalyzed cleavage at Arg372. However, the presence of anti-C2 type 1 delayed the cleavage at Arg336 in timed- and dose-dependent manners, whilst either anti-A2 or anti-C2 type 2 did not affect, consistent with the functional inactivation results. FVIIa binds to the A2, A3, and C2 domains in FVIII. Based on our findings, FVIIa-interactive sites on FVIII unlikely overlapped with anti-A2 and -C2 inhibitor epitopes, and inhibition of Arg336 cleavage may be due to conformational change caused by antibody binding. Furthermore, FVIIa indeed activates FVIII even in the presence of anti-FVIII inhibitors, different from thrombin, FXa, etc, and it would be important to predict the effect of FVIIa for FVIII to determine the characteristics of anti-FVIII inhibitors. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 213-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiji Kameno ◽  
Makoto Inoue ◽  
Kiyoaki Wajima ◽  
Satoko Sawada-Satoh ◽  
Zhi-Qiang Shen

AbstractWe report very long baseline array (VLBA) observations at 2.3, 8.4, and 15.4 GHz towards nine gigahertz peaked spectrum (GPS) sources. One Seyfert 1 galaxy, one Seyfert 2 galaxy, three radio galaxies, and four quasars were included in our survey. We obtained spatial distributions of the free–free absorption (FFA) opacity with milliarcsecond resolution for all sources. It is found that type 1 (Seyfert 1 and quasars) and type 2 (Seyfert 2 and radio galaxies) sources showed different distributions of the FFA opacities. The type 1 sources tend to show more asymmetric opacity distributions towards a double lobe, while those of the type 2 sources are rather symmetric. Our results imply that the different viewing angle of the jet causes the difference of FFA opacity along the external absorber. This idea supports the unified scheme between quasars and radio galaxies, proposed by Barthel (1989).


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun-Zhen Li ◽  
Jie-Yao Li ◽  
Ting-Feng Wu ◽  
Ji-Hao Xu ◽  
Can-Ze Huang ◽  
...  

Background. Extragastric manifestations ofHelicobacter pylori(H. pylori) infection have been reported in many diseases. However, there are still controversies about whetherH. pyloriinfection is associated with diabetes mellitus (DM). This study was aimed at answering the question.Methods. A systematic search of the literature from January 1996 to January 2016 was conducted in PubMed, Embase databases, Cochrane Library, Google Scholar, Wanfang Data, China national knowledge database, and SinoMed. Published studies reportingH. pyloriinfection in both DM and non-DM individuals were recruited.Results. 79 studies with 57,397 individuals were included in this meta-analysis. The prevalence ofH. pyloriinfection in DM group (54.9%) was significantly higher than that (47.5%) in non-DM group (OR = 1.69,P<0.001). The difference was significant in comparison between type 2 DM group and non-DM group (OR = 2.05), but not in that between type 1 DM group and non-DM group (OR = 1.23, 95% CI: 0.77–1.96,P=0.38).Conclusion. Our meta-analysis suggested that there is significantly higher prevalence ofH. pyloriinfection in DM patients as compared to non-DM individuals. And the difference is associated with type 2 DM but not type 1 DM.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fleur Zeldenrust ◽  
Boris Gutkin ◽  
Sophie Denéve

Cortical networks show a large heterogeneity of neuronal properties. However, traditional coding models have focused on homogeneous populations of excitatory and inhibitory neurons. Here, we analytically derive a class of recurrent networks of spiking neurons that close to optimally track a continuously varying input online, based on two assumptions: 1) every spike is decoded linearly and 2) the network aims to reduce the mean-squared error between the input and the estimate. From this we derive a class of predictive coding networks, that unifies encoding and decoding and in which we can investigate the difference between homogeneous networks and heterogeneous networks, in which each neurons represents different features and has different spike-generating properties. We find that in this framework, ‘type 1’ and ‘type 2’ neurons arise naturally and networks consisting of a heterogeneous population of different neuron types are both more efficient and more robust against correlated noise. We make two experimental predictions: 1) we predict that integrators show strong correlations with other integrators and resonators are correlated with resonators, whereas the correlations are much weaker between neurons with different coding properties and 2) that ‘type 2’ neurons are more coherent with the overall network activity than ‘type 1’ neurons.


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