Conceptual Modeling

Version 0.2.0, 8/15/2019

What is conceptual modeling?

 * The process of describing a situation in a way that enables someone to fulfill a particular purpose.
 * It's not the concept modeling of architecture (making a physical model of a design), and it's broader than the conceptual modeling of software design.
 * Regardless of its specific procedure, logically it divides into two types of activities:
 * Analysis: separating the subject matter into its components.
 * Synthesis: reassembling the parts by identifying their relationships.

What is this article?

 * A summary of my current thinking on a general approach to conceptual modeling.

Why am I developing a modeling approach?

 * Modeling is a key tool in my life, and I want a more effective way to do it. Developing a method will help me use it more often and with a more thorough and consistent procedure.
 * Modeling should get more widespread use, and work on a general approach can serve as a foundation for its adoption.
 * It's relatively easy to find tools of analysis and modeling in specific domains, but it's hard to find work that ties it all together.
 * Applying a single method to multiple domains means that each domain's conceptual modeling will involve less duplicated work than if they developed their techniques independently.

Why am I writing this article?

 * A summary will help me direct my work and organize the presentation of my findings. The summary is a research agenda.

Why do we do conceptual modeling?

 * To clarify thinking.
 * To learn information or a skill.
 * To create other content.
 * To build tools.
 * To manage activity.
 * To reach agreement.
 * To make decisions.
 * To solve problems.
 * In the case of this essay, our purpose is to have a general modeling procedure to apply.

Why should we improve it?

 * Better models help us solve more problems and solve them better.
 * Faster modeling helps us create these better models sooner.

What is it?

 * The collaboration among multiple academic or professional disciplines to pursue the interdisciplinary field's goals.

Why should a conceptual modeling method use it?

 * Different disciplines have methods and frameworks and viewpoints particular to themselves that can be generalized so that other disciplines can use them.

How can we use it?

 * Investigate the potential contributions of various disciplines to modeling.
 * Collaborate with those disciplines, seeking input and dialoguing for new insights.
 * Model the modeling of various disciplines, and generalize the results.

Overview: How does conceptual modeling work?

 * The modeler follows a process that involves querying internal and external sources in terms of particular conceptual frameworks, evaluating the findings, and encoding the resulting model to present it to the model's stakeholders.

Status

 * As a summary, this article doesn't give all the practical advice we'd want.
 * As a summary, the article doesn't address every question, objection, or competing model.
 * As a work in progress, much of it is likely to change in the relatively near future.
 * As a work in progress, it has uneven coverage and gaps that future work will hopefully fill.
 * As a model of modeling, it's subject to evaluation.
 * Since I'm an outsider to most of these disciplines, my initial sources are introductory or popular-level treatments.
 * Since the article is primarily meant for my own use, it might not make complete sense to other people.

What is it?

 * The large-scale procedure that moves the model from conception to completion.

Why do we need it?

 * A consistent procedure enables more reliable planning and better results.

How is it done?

 * An agile methodology is a good starting point.
 * Initialize the project.
 * Gather requirements.
 * Gather personnel and other resources.
 * Plan the work.
 * Research conceptual frameworks and domain knowledge.
 * Conduct modeling sessions.
 * Modify existing frameworks, and create new ones as needed.
 * Test the results.
 * Iterate over this procedure to improve the model.
 * Present the final product.
 * Close the project.

What is a mental process in conceptual modeling?

 * A set of activities carried out in the mind to pursue a goal, in this case to become aware of the possible components and relationships of a model and to reason about them.

Why should we know about them?

 * Modeling can't happen without mental processes.
 * The quality of mental processes vary and can be improved with knowledge and practice.

What is it?

 * Consciously directing the subconscious to deliver answers to explicit or implicit questions.

Why do we need it?

 * It's the way we articulate information we already know but don't have in our immediate awareness.
 * Having no procedure means the information becomes conscious haphazardly rather than when we need it.

How does it work?

 * The mind recalls information based on cues.
 * To ask questions you need a conceptual framework, even a simple and fragmentary one. Your subconscious is matching its perceptions and contents to patterns.
 * Make guesses about answers, and evaluate them based on the feelings and thoughts your subconscious reports back with.
 * The mind can index information in many ways, so be varied in your cues.
 * Externalize the information you surface to serve as further cues without burdening your working memory.

What is it?

 * The application of logic to information to draw inferences and evaluate claims.

Why do we need it?

 * Reality apparently works in a consistent and logical fashion, and models that aren't regulated by logic have a higher chance of clashing with reality, thus failing or causing harm.

How is it done?

 * Learn appropriate conceptual frameworks for logic: categorical, propositional, first-order, bayesian, informal fallacies, cognitive biases, etc.
 * Carry out the mental processes of modeling, applying the logical frameworks to the information and following the conclusions the applications indicate.

What is it?

 * Practices engaged in to maximize the amount of work accomplished.

Why do we need it?

 * Using time wisely is responsible.
 * Many projects will be under a time crunch.
 * Maximizing work gives you a competitive advantage, against the problems you're solving, if nothing else.

How is it done?

 * Follow general productivity practices.
 * Follow nonlinear modeling.
 * Apply as many frameworks as applicable.
 * Build on previous work.

What is it?

 * Creating a new conceptual framework to use in creating a model.

Why do we need it?

 * Models seem to be instantiations of more general frameworks.
 * Our minds need expectations to serve as cues for surfacing more information and patterns to recognize.
 * Models need many different shapes and features to account for all the situations we need to understand to solve all the kinds of problems we encounter.
 * New frameworks can be created based on preexisting components.

How is it done?

 * The most manipulable models are based on a framework of parts and relationships.
 * Adapt existing frameworks.
 * Components can be assembled from simpler particles and differentiated from more general categories.
 * Components can be decomposed and then reshaped.
 * Abstract from existing models.

What is it?

 * Frameworks lie on a spectrum of generality, and different fields tend to generate frameworks in different places along the spectrum.
 * These are mainly sources on the more general end of the spectrum, plus some closer to the specific end.

Why do we need it?

 * The more general fields give us fundamental frameworks and components that can be applied to a broad range of modeling situations.
 * The more specific fields give us models that can be applied directly to situations in those fields and to other fields by analogy.

How is it done?

 * Explore likely fundamental fields:
 * Linguistics
 * Mathematics
 * Software engineering
 * Knowledge representation
 * Knowledge organization
 * Data visualization
 * Explore more specific fields. This list is a small sample:
 * Physics
 * Systems theory
 * Intelligence analysis
 * Business analysis
 * Social science research

What is it?

 * The representation and framing of the model in relation to its purpose for the project's stakeholders.

Why do we need it?

 * The models we build are abstractions, but to communicate them and work with them effectively, we have to give them concrete representations.
 * Fulfilling the project's purpose will usually require communicating more than a bare statement of the model. The presenter will need to frame it, which may include introducing and applying the model.

How is it done?

 * Identify the key communication factors.
 * Purpose
 * Audience
 * Context
 * Format
 * Compose the presentation.
 * Transform the model into the needed format.
 * Frame the model according to the project's purpose.
 * Conduct the presentation.
 * Evaluate the presentation.

Examples
From this site:


 * On Being an Agnostic Christian
 * A Framework and Agenda for Memory Improvement
 * Navigating the World of Comics
 * Math Relearning/Fundamentals
 * Math Relearning/Number Sense
 * Math Relearning/Math Student Simulator/Introduction - A discussion of learning by programming.
 * Book Weeding Criteria

From other authors who seem to take a similar approach:


 * Visualization Analysis and Design by Tamara Munzner

Roadmap
Here, in general terms, are the improvements I have in mind for this essay.


 * Articulate and expand my metamodel.
 * Articulate the intuitions to follow.
 * Formalize a procedure.
 * Articulate a supporting model of the mind.
 * Expand the method to cover group processes.
 * Expand it to cover evaluation of claims.
 * Articulate the essential and distinctive features of my approach.
 * Expand my library of model patterns.
 * Expand my library of indirect questions.
 * Incorporate a programming approach.
 * Develop arguments for studying modeling.

Potential sources
Alexander, Christopher, and Christopher Alexander. The Process of Creating Life: An Essay on the Art of Building and the Nature of the Universe. The Center for Environmental Structure Series, v. 10. Berkeley, CA: Center for Environmental Structure, 2002.

Bernard, H. Russell, Amber Wutich, and Gery Wayne Ryan. Analyzing Qualitative Data: Systematic Approaches. 2nd ed. Los Angeles: SAGE, 2017.

Britt, David W. A Conceptual Introduction to Modeling: Qualitative and Quantitative Perspectives. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1997.

Checkland, Peter. Systems Thinking, Systems Practice: Includes a 30-Year Retrospective. Chichester; New York: John Wiley, 1999.

Cooper, Alan. About Face: The Essentials of Interaction Design. 4th ed. Indianapolis, IN: John Wiley and Sons, 2014.

Evans, Eric. Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software. Boston: Addison-Wesley, 2004.

Flood, Robert L. Rethinking the Fifth Discipline: Learning within the Unknowable. London; New York: Routledge, 1999.

Halpin, T. A., and A. J. Morgan. Information Modeling and Relational Databases. 2nd ed. Morgan Kaufmann Series in Data Management Systems. Burlington, MA: Elsevier/Morgan Kaufman Publishers, 2008.

Herman, Amy. Visual Intelligence: Sharpen Your Perception, Change Your Life. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016.

Heuer, Richards J., and Randolph H. Pherson. Structured Analytic Techniques for Intelligence Analysis. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: CQ Press, 2015.

Horton, Susan R. Thinking through Writing. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982.

Huddleston, Rodney D., and Geoffrey K. Pullum. A Student’s Introduction to English Grammar. Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

Lesh, Richard A., and Helen M. Doerr, eds. Beyond Constructivism: Models and Modeling Perspectives on Mathematics Problem Solving, Learning, and Teaching. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2003.

McDonald, Kent J. Beyond Requirements: Analysis with an Agile Mindset. New York: Addison-Wesley, 2016.

Michalko, Michael. Thinkertoys: A Handbook of Creative-Thinking Techniques. 2nd ed. Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 2006.

Munzner, Tamara. Visualization Analysis and Design. A.K. Peters Visualization Series. Boca Raton: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, CRC Press is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business, 2015.

Osborne, Grant R. The Hermeneutical Spiral: A Comprehensive Introduction to Biblical Interpretation. 2nd ed. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2006.

Porter, Bruce, Vladimir Lifschitz, and Frank Van Harmelen, eds. Handbook of Knowledge Representation. 1st ed. Foundations of Artificial Intelligence. Amsterdam; Boston: Elsevier, 2008.

Rosenfeld, Louis, Peter Morville, and Jorge Arango. Information Architecture: For the Web and Beyond. 4th ed. Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly Media, Inc, 2015.

Saeed, John I. Semantics. 4th ed. Introducing Linguistics 2. Chichester, West Sussex [England]; Malden, MA: Wiley Blackwell, 2016.

Sterman, John. Business Dynamics: Systems Thinking and Modeling for a Complex World. Boston: Irwin/McGraw-Hill, 2000.