Abstract
Intensification of service and knowledge contents within product life cycles is considered crucial for dematerialization, in particular, to design optimal product-service systems from the viewpoint of environmentally conscious design and manufacturing in advanced post industrial societies. In addition to the environmental limitations, we are facing social limitations which include limitations of markets to accept increasing numbers of mass-produced artifacts and such environmental and social limitations are restraining economic growth. To attack and remove these problems, we need to reconsider the current mass production paradigm and to make products have more added values largely from knowledge and service contents to compensate volume reduction under the concept of dematerialization. Namely, dematerialization of products needs to enrich service contents. However, service was mainly discussed within marketing and has been mostly neglected within traditional engineering. Therefore, we need new engineering methods to look at services, rather than just functions, called “Service Engineering.” To establish service engineering, this paper proposes a modeling technique of service.
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© 2005 International Federation for Infrmation Processing
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Shimomura, Y., Tomiyama, T. (2005). Service Modeling for Service Engineering. In: Arai, E., Kimura, F., Goossenaerts, J., Shirase, K. (eds) Knowledge and Skill Chains in Engineering and Manufacturing. DIISM 2002. IFIP International Federation for Information Processing, vol 168. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-23852-2_4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-23852-2_4
Publisher Name: Springer, Boston, MA
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