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How people’s appreciation of products is affected by their knowledge of the designers’ intentions


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Authors

da Silva, O 
Hekkert, P 

Abstract

Products result from processes that are guided by designers’ intentions for what the products should be, what they should be like and what they should do. People might infer these intentions more or less accurately from the products’ form, or they might learn about them from a variety of sources such as advertisements and other marketing materials. Whether inferred or learned, knowledge of design intentions might influence the way in which people regard and appreciate products. Despite this possible influence, design research has not empirically addressed the questions of whether intention knowledge affects product appreciation and, if so, how. We investigated these questions by conducting two studies using a mixed-methods approach. Study 1 provided experimental evidence that intention knowledge has an effect on product appreciation. Study 2 explained this effect with interview data showing that intention knowledge affects product appreciation in three ways: it influences the perception of the product, enables an evaluation of the intention and also an evaluation of the product as a means to fulfill the intention. These findings are relevant to design research and practice in providing the grounds for a deeper understanding of the role that intention knowledge plays in product appreciation.

Description

Keywords

Design Intention, Design Knowledge, Intention Knowledge, Product Appreciation, Product Experience, User Experience

Journal Title

International Journal of Design

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1991-3761
1994-036X

Volume Title

9

Publisher

Chinese Institute of Design

Publisher DOI

Sponsorship
This research is part of Project UMA (www.project-uma.com), which is supported by the MAGW VICI grant number 453-10-004, awarded to Paul Hekkert by The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research.