Framing Hypotheses: A Cautionary Tale

The story of a rodent invasion—and its lessons

Engineering Animal Behavior

Current Issue

This Article From Issue

January-February 2003

Volume 91, Number 1
Page 18

DOI: 10.1511/2003.11.18

The practice of engineering, like that of science, necessarily involves making assumptions, drawing inferences and framing hypotheses. These mental constructs represent cognitive choices that often must be made among mutually exclusive ideas. If an engineer is asked to design a bridge, the informed choice may be between a suspension and a cable-stayed type. For the sake of analysis, one of these will be assumed and the other all but forgotten. The analysis, which itself involves numerous choices among details large and small, results in a design and a cost for that design. The alternative bridge type can later be assumed and analyzed to completion, providing the basis for comparison on functional, aesthetic and economic grounds. A final choice among all the hypothetical bridges results in the bridge that is built.

Tom Dunne

To access the full article, please log in or subscribe.

American Scientist Comments and Discussion

To discuss our articles or comment on them, please share them and tag American Scientist on social media platforms. Here are links to our profiles on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

If we re-share your post, we will moderate comments/discussion following our comments policy.