Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Larsen, K., Lukyanenko, R., Mueller, Roland M., Storey, V., Parsons, J., Vandermeer, D., Hovorka, D.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.09466
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866909560629886976
author Larsen, K.
Lukyanenko, R.
Mueller, Roland M.
Storey, V.
Parsons, J.
Vandermeer, D.
Hovorka, D.
author_facet Larsen, K.
Lukyanenko, R.
Mueller, Roland M.
Storey, V.
Parsons, J.
Vandermeer, D.
Hovorka, D.
contents Researchers must ensure that the claims about the knowledge produced by their work are valid. However, validity is neither well-understood nor consistently established in design science, which involves the development and evaluation of artifacts (models, methods, instantiations, and theories) to solve problems. As a result, it is challenging to demonstrate and communicate the validity of knowledge claims about artifacts. This paper defines validity in design science and derives the Design Science Validity Framework and a process model for applying it. The framework comprises three high-level claim and validity types-criterion, causal, and context-as well as validity subtypes. The framework guides researchers in integrating validity considerations into projects employing design science and contributes to the growing body of research on design science methodology. It also provides a systematic way to articulate and validate the knowledge claims of design science projects. We apply the framework to examples from existing research and then use it to demonstrate the validity of knowledge claims about the framework itself.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_09466
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Validity in Design Science
Larsen, K.
Lukyanenko, R.
Mueller, Roland M.
Storey, V.
Parsons, J.
Vandermeer, D.
Hovorka, D.
Software Engineering
Researchers must ensure that the claims about the knowledge produced by their work are valid. However, validity is neither well-understood nor consistently established in design science, which involves the development and evaluation of artifacts (models, methods, instantiations, and theories) to solve problems. As a result, it is challenging to demonstrate and communicate the validity of knowledge claims about artifacts. This paper defines validity in design science and derives the Design Science Validity Framework and a process model for applying it. The framework comprises three high-level claim and validity types-criterion, causal, and context-as well as validity subtypes. The framework guides researchers in integrating validity considerations into projects employing design science and contributes to the growing body of research on design science methodology. It also provides a systematic way to articulate and validate the knowledge claims of design science projects. We apply the framework to examples from existing research and then use it to demonstrate the validity of knowledge claims about the framework itself.
title Validity in Design Science
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.09466