Abstract

The development of computer-integrated systems for engineering design requires models to describe and organize the information and activities involved in design. A product model describes the information created during the design process, and a process model describes the associated design activities. Product and process models can be integrated into a single model. An entity-based approach is one way to carry out this integration. An entity-based integrated model uses product entities and process entities to represent design information and design activities, respectively. The relationships among these entities include organizational, interaction and sequence relationships. Organizational relationships organize entities into hierarchies, interaction relationships characterize the nature of entity interactions, and sequence relationships identify the sequences in which process entities are initiated during the design process. This paper presents an overview of the product and process entities, and the organizational, interaction and sequence relationships of entity-based integrated design product and process models. Formal concepts and notation used to represent these entities and relationships are described using a simple design example. © 1998 Published by Elsevier Science Limited. All rights reserved.

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