Here are some further definitions and models that can help in research.
Mind Maps
This is a tool to aid thinking and they have been around for many centuries in one form of another. A mind map is a kind of free diagram used to represent “things” which might be: words, ideas, tasks, or any other items that can be linked to and arranged around a central element or idea. Mind maps are typically used to generate, visualize, structure, and classify ideas but in a relatively free manner and can be created and used alone or in groups. The basic idea perhaps is to use them as an aid in study or as a way of organizing problem solving as you try to trace out all the various elements and links there might be.
The elements of a given mind map are arranged randomly or intuitively to start with as they are discovered but later and according to their importance or other characteristic the map elements are classified into groups, branches, or areas, with the goal of representing semantic or other connections between them. Of these it is likely that a good choice of groups is of foremost importance because it stops the map becoming over complicated.
By presenting ideas, usually in a radial and graphical but commonly non-linear manner, mind maps can often be a way to use the brainstorming approach so elements of the map will emerge in a more or less random fashion and this is a good idea because it forces one off ones usual thought patterns. Once you establish good grouping in a mind map it is a good idea to then look for a hierarchical tree structures but their radial nature disrupts the prioritizing of concepts typically associated with hierarchies presented in a more linear visual manner. It is therefore helpful if you have software to do this because then the nodes in the mind map are easily manipulated, moved and grouped and re-grouped and there are numerous software packages available to do this.
Rich Picture
These are a kind of cartoon drawing that illustrates what is going on in a situation where appropriate boundaries have been set. A common and insidious mistake to make with these drawings is to think they allow you to “draw the problems”; they are not because to use them properly you draw what you see and hope the problem situations may emerge from that drawing. Typically we look for the following: structural elements (things that are not subject to rapid change), processes, interaction, other factual Information, add yourself and if necessary, always ask does the picture show the whole and does it show what is being done?
Mind Maps
This is a tool to aid thinking and they have been around for many centuries in one form of another. A mind map is a kind of free diagram used to represent “things” which might be: words, ideas, tasks, or any other items that can be linked to and arranged around a central element or idea. Mind maps are typically used to generate, visualize, structure, and classify ideas but in a relatively free manner and can be created and used alone or in groups. The basic idea perhaps is to use them as an aid in study or as a way of organizing problem solving as you try to trace out all the various elements and links there might be.
The elements of a given mind map are arranged randomly or intuitively to start with as they are discovered but later and according to their importance or other characteristic the map elements are classified into groups, branches, or areas, with the goal of representing semantic or other connections between them. Of these it is likely that a good choice of groups is of foremost importance because it stops the map becoming over complicated.
By presenting ideas, usually in a radial and graphical but commonly non-linear manner, mind maps can often be a way to use the brainstorming approach so elements of the map will emerge in a more or less random fashion and this is a good idea because it forces one off ones usual thought patterns. Once you establish good grouping in a mind map it is a good idea to then look for a hierarchical tree structures but their radial nature disrupts the prioritizing of concepts typically associated with hierarchies presented in a more linear visual manner. It is therefore helpful if you have software to do this because then the nodes in the mind map are easily manipulated, moved and grouped and re-grouped and there are numerous software packages available to do this.
Rich Picture
These are a kind of cartoon drawing that illustrates what is going on in a situation where appropriate boundaries have been set. A common and insidious mistake to make with these drawings is to think they allow you to “draw the problems”; they are not because to use them properly you draw what you see and hope the problem situations may emerge from that drawing. Typically we look for the following: structural elements (things that are not subject to rapid change), processes, interaction, other factual Information, add yourself and if necessary, always ask does the picture show the whole and does it show what is being done?