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| What is TRIZ? |
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TRIZ, also known as the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving, is a problem solving technique developed by Genrich S. Altshuller in 1926. Born in the former Soviet Union in 1926, Altshuller developed an approach, relying not on psychology but on technology. Altshuller felt a theory of invention should satisfy the following conditions:
What Altshuller tabulated was that over 90% of the problems engineers faced had been solved somewhere before. If engineers could follow a path to an ideal solution, starting with the lowest level, their personal knowledge and experience, and working their way to higher levels, most of the solutions could be derived from knowledge already present in the company, industry, or in another industry. Altshuller distilled the problems, contradictions, and solutions in these patents into a theory of inventive problem solving which he named TRIZ. Altshuller also found that over 90% of the problems faced by inventors had been solved in various technical fields using any of only about forty fundamental inventive principles. For a slightly more in depth look at TRIZ, please click HERE
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