Inventive standard
This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. (October 2019) |
In TRIZ, inventive standards are a set of rules of synthesis and transformation of technical systems directly resulting from laws of evolution of these systems.[1] As a rule, solving of a complex inventive problem is addressed to a combination of at least one TRIZ method and physical effect. Based on frequently used combinations of TRIZ methods and physical effects Genrich Altshuller[2] proposed inventive standards.
Current Definition (TRIZ Glossary)
[edit | edit source]According to TRIZ Dictionary,[3] inventive standard is a problem-solving method which proposes a rule presenting how to transform a Su-Field given to achieve the result required. The description of the rule consists of two parts: its left part presents an existing Su-Field that has to be improved (a generic model of a problem) and its right part presents a Su-Field that implements such an improvement (a generic model of a solution).
Ontology Diagram
[edit | edit source]The following picture presents the ontology diagram of Inventive standard concept.
Invetive standards TRIZ Ontology diagram
Related TRIZ terms (on the diagram)
[edit | edit source]Standard Inventive Problem
Substance-Field Model
TRIZ method (?)
Physical Effect
References
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