
PROJECT
The action-centric perspective is a label given to a collection of interrelated concepts, which are antithetical to the traditional model. It sounds like a story.
In the action-centric perspective, designers use phrases alternately between “framing,” “making moves,” and “evaluating moves” or “evaluating framing,” hence it conceptualizes this pattern as “defining goals as criteria for success, or defining goals and subgoals.”
A “move” is a tentative design decision. The iterative process can be seen briefly by looking at the history of the design.
In the watermelon/computation/implementation perspective, designers attempt to better define the three task activities. Alternatively, they operate based on their experience by using the “moves” and evaluate each based on its merits/deficits of the content, and vice versa.











