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Biased Information Passing Between Subsystems Over Time in Complex System Design

Author(s)
Yang, Maria C.; Austin-Breneman, Jesse; Yu, Bo Yang; Yang, Maria C.
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Abstract
During the early stage design of large-scale engineering systems, design teams are challenged to balance a complex set of considerations. The established structured approaches for optimizing complex system designs offer strategies for achieving optimal solutions, but in practice suboptimal system-level results are often reached due to factors such as satisficing, ill-defined problems, or other project constraints. Twelve subsystem and system-level practitioners at a large aerospace organization were interviewed to understand the ways in which they integrate subsystems in their own work. Responses showed subsystem team members often presented conservative, worst-case scenarios to other subsystems when negotiating a tradeoff as a way of hedging against their own future needs. This practice of biased information passing, referred to informally by the practitioners as adding "margins," is modeled in this paper with a series of optimization simulations. Three "bias" conditions were tested: no bias, a constant bias, and a bias which decreases with time. Results from the simulations show that biased information passing negatively affects both the number of iterations needed and the Pareto optimality of system-level solutions. Results are also compared to the interview responses and highlight several themes with respect to complex system design practice.
Date issued
2015-11
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/120033
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Ocean Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Data, Systems, and Society; MIT Edgerton Center
Journal
Journal of Mechanical Design
Publisher
ASME International
Citation
Austin-Breneman, Jesse, Bo Yang Yu, and Maria C. Yang. “Biased Information Passing Between Subsystems Over Time in Complex System Design.” Journal of Mechanical Design 138, no. 1 (November 4, 2015): 011101.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1050-0472

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