Publication

Retrieving Causally Related Functions from Natural-language Text for Biomimetic Design

AbstractIdentifying biological analogies is a significant challenge in biomimetic (biologically inspired) design. This paper builds on our previous work on finding biological phenomena in natural-language text. Specifically, a rule-based computational technique is used to identify biological analogies that contain causal relations. Causally related functions describe how one function is enabled by another function, and support the transfer of functional structure from analogies to design solutions. The causal-relation retrieval method uses patterns of syntactic information that represent causally related functions in individual sentences, and scored F-measures of 0.73–0.85. In a user study, novice designers found that of the total search matches, proportionally more of the matches obtained with the causal-relation retrieval method were relevant to design problems than those obtained with a single verb-keyword search. In addition, matches obtained with the causal-relation retrieval method increased the likelihood of using functional association to develop design concepts. Finally, the causal-relation retrieval method enables automatic extraction of biological analogies at the sentence level from a large amount of natural-language sources, which could support other approaches to biologically inspired design that require the identification of interesting biological phenomena.LINK

Related Resources

See what’s new.

Publication

2008

Results of the Enumeration of Costas Arrays of Order 27

This correspondence presents the results of the enumeration of Costas…

Publication

1991

GEdit: a testbed for editing by contiguous gesture

GEdit is a prototype graphical editor that permits you to create and…

Publication

2011

Simulation and the Future of Design Tools for Ecological Research

As buildings mediate between a complex external system (weather) and a…

Publication

2003

Quad/Triangle Subdivision

In this paper we introduce a new subdivision operator that unifies…

Get in touch

Something pique your interest? Get in touch if you’d like to learn more about Autodesk Research, our projects, people, and potential collaboration opportunities.

Contact us