114. TRIZ method
1. TRIZ method
As one of the creative problem solving theories, physical contradiction (which should exist and does not exist at the same time) and technical contradiction (a phenomenon in which other characteristics deteriorate when one structure of a system is improved) is compromised with contradictions. It is a technique that seeks the fundamental resolution of contradictions. The 40 invention principles (invention creation technique) of the TRIZ invention technique are as follows.
Segmentation, extraction, local quality, asymmetry, time or space consolidation, multi functional, nesting, counter weight, preliminary counter action, preliminary action, preliminary compensation, equipotential, inversion, spheroidal, flexibility, excess or partial or excessive, dimension change, vibration, periodic action, continuity of useful action, skipping, convert from harmful to useful, feedback, intermediate, self-service, copying, disposable, replacing mechanical system, pneumatic and hydraulic, flexible shell and thin film, porous material, color change, homogeneity, discarding and recovering, parameter change, phase transition, thermal expansion, use of strong oxidizers, inert environments, and composite material
The ASIT (Advanced systematic inventive thinking) method is a simplified invention technique of the TRIZ method, and the principles of the ASIT invention method are as follows: unification, multiplication, division, and symmetry breaking, and removal.
Inventogram is an in-between invention technique that supplements the complexity of TRIZ and the simplicity of ASIT. The 18 principles of invention are as follows:
add, subtract, increase or decrease, change in shape, location movement, duplication, material change, phase change, separation, symmetry, Asymmetry, preparation, reversal, period change, alignment, out of alignment, alteration of use, environmental change, and conditional function
*I am a student learning IP, not an IP expert. Translation is also a translator and my short English skills. I hope it will be helpful to those who do not have the relevant knowledge or those who want to learn about IP.
*The above is what I learned from Professor Oh's lecture on the 4th industrial revolution and patents, which can be viewed through K-mooc. Here is the link to the lecture (you may not be able to view it without logging in).
kmooc.kr/courses/course-v1:CAUk+CAU02K+2021_1/course