Requirements Framing Affects Design Creativity
This addresses the problem of optimizing design creativity for software developers and managers, though it is incremental as it builds on limited prior research in this area.
The study investigated how framing desiderata as ideas, requirements, or prioritized requirements affects design creativity in software projects, finding that requirements framing led to less original but more practical designs compared to ideas framing.
Design creativity, the originality and practicality of a solution concept is critical for the success of many software projects. However, little research has investigated the relationship between the way desiderata are presented and design creativity. This study therefore investigates the impact of presenting desiderata as ideas, requirements or prioritized requirements on design creativity. Two between-subjects randomized controlled experiments were conducted with 42 and 34 participants. Participants were asked to create design concepts from a list of desiderata. Participants who received desiderata framed as requirements or prioritized requirements created designs that are, on average, less original but more practical than the designs created by participants who received desiderata framed as ideas. This suggests that more formal, structured presentations of desiderata are less appropriate where a creative solution is desired. The results also show that design performance is highly susceptible to minor changes in the vernacular used to communicate desiderata.