Autor: |
Bhatia, Garima V., Dyas, Jeffrey, Clerkin, Joseph, Mesmer, Bryan L. |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Proceedings of the 2017 International Annual Conference of the American Society for Engineering Management; 2017, p1-11, 11p |
Abstrakt: |
Systems engineering can be described as the observation, communication, representation, and execution of stakeholder preferences. A stakeholder can be defined as any individual involved with any decision-making process associated with the system in question. Stakeholders can range from CEOs, project managers, and design engineers to end-users and regulatory bodies. The preferences of each of these stakeholders will likely vary. It is important to capture the preferences of all the stakeholders in order to enable a well-informed system design process. Multiple methods of preference elicitation exist currently. One of the easiest and cheapest methods is the use of surveys. The goal of this paper is to lay the foundational work for the formation of surveys that can be handed out to a multidisciplinary team of stakeholders that may have varied preferences. It lays out the first steps of a very detailed study aimed at eliciting stakeholder preferences. These surveys will be useful for examining the relationships between group and individual preferences in the future. A future research plan will also be described that envisions the use of survey analyses to form value models, comparisons of value models to individual rank orderings, and incorporation of a multi-cultural aerospace design team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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