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What is visualisation

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Street maps. Node-link diagrams. 2D diagrams. SemNet. Cone Tree ... Broad Street. Pump. Dr. John Snow: Statistical Map Visualization. Visualising Tree Data 1 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is visualisation


1
What is visualisation ?
  • Visualise (vb) to form a mental image or vision
    of
  • Cognitive ability
  • Allows us to internalise data
  • Gain insight and understanding
  • Internal Map Cognitive Model

2
What are data types ?
  • Various different types of data
  • Numerical
  • Ordinal
  • Naturally order ( days of the week )
  • Categorical
  • Not ordered ( animal names )

3
Basic Visualization Approaches
  • Clustering
  • Galaxy of News
  • ThemeScape
  • Hot Sauce
  • Geographic
  • Floor plans
  • Street maps
  • Node-link diagrams
  • 2D diagrams
  • SemNet
  • Cone Tree
  • Fisheye Cone Tree
  • Hyperbolic viewer
  • FSN
  • XML3D
  • Indentation
  • Tree control
  • Fisheye
  • Containment
  • Treemaps
  • Pad

4
Examples of Visualisation
  • London Underground Harry Beck
  • Connectivity
  • Deals with connections, not focused on geography
  • Differs from other maps, as familiar geography
    was not overriding concern

5
London Underground Map 1927
6
London Underground Map 1990s
7
Dr. John SnowStatistical Map Visualization
Broad StreetPump
  • 1855 London Cholera Epidemic

8
Visualising Tree Data 1
  • CS use of trees for data storage

9
Visualising Tree Data 2
  • Difficult to visualise large tree structures
  • Take a company
  • CEO as the root node
  • People reporting to him at next level
  • So on until all the employees are included

10
Tree Maps 1 Schneiderman
11
Tree Maps 2 Schneiderman
  • Johnson Schneiderman, University of Maryland,
    Vis91
  • Space filling
  • 3000 objects
  • MicroLogics DiskMapper

12
Hyperbolic Browsing - Lamping
13
H3 - 1997
Munzner, Stanford Univ., InfoVis97 Projected
onto sphere 20,000 nodes
14
Information Visualisation in Information Retrieval
  • on-line information
  • diversity of users of such resources
  • potential overload
  • establish new formats for the presentation and
    manipulation of electronic data
  • spatial ability is an important predictor of
    effectiveness and efficiency when performing
    common information (i.e. textual) search tasks

15
Usefulness of Visualisation in IR
  • Allows semantic relationships to be represented
  • Use of Metaphors such as
  • spatial proximity
  • visual links
  • Allows users to develop a conceptual map of the
    information space

16
Linking IR to real world tasks
  • Searching Browsing of information can be
    related to real world navigation
  • Complex Datasets can hide trends / information
  • A well design graph can express shopping trends
    through the use of Store Card information

17
IR and Hypermedia
  • WWW another information space
  • Overview Maps Zooming/Panning
  • Improve performance and satisfaction
  • Move load from cognitive to perceptual
    processes
  • visualising and directly interact with
    conventional hypermedia and unstructured text

18
Combing IR and VR new perceptions of data
  • Virtual Reality (VR) environments can further
    enhance visualisations
  • Allows for
  • Real Time Interactivity
  • Viewing of relationships between object from
    unlimited number of perspectives
  • Can allow for haptic or non-visual methods of
    feedback to the user

19
Visualization Taxonomy - 1994
  • Implicit (use of perspective)
  • Continuous focus and context
  • Filtered (removing items of low interest)
  • Discrete focus and context
  • Distorted (size, shape, position of elements)
  • Adorned (color, texture)

Reference Noik (Graphics Interface94)
20
Approaches to IV
  • Core approaches - Colebourne et al. (1994)
  • 'Benediktine' cyberspace
  • statistical clustering and proximity
  • hyper-structures
  • human centred
  • Categories are not mutually exclusive

21
'Benediktine' cyberspace
  • Benedikt - 1991
  • assigns object attributes (e.g. file size, age,
    key words) on to extrinsic (x,y,z) and intrinsic
    (e.g. shape) dimensions.
  • Well suited to data that is explicitly structured

22
'Benediktine' cyberspace
23
Statistical Clustering and Proximity
  • Applies statistical models to data prior to
    presenting the visualisation
  • conveys spatially the underlying semantic
    structure.
  • spatial proximity of documents -gt reflect their
    semantic similarity
  • Various techniques generate these semantic
    proximities (eg Vector Space Model)

24
Statistical Clustering and Proximity
25
Hyper-structures
  • extend the notion of hypertext directly
  • use 3-D graph drawing algorithms to create the
    visualisation
  • Works well where explicit links exist, eg in
    hypertext
  • Various graph visualisation techniques available

26
Hyper-structure (Cone Tree 1)
Robertson, Mackinlay Card, Xerox PARC,
CHI91 Limits 10 levels 1000 nodes Up to 10,000
27
Hyper-structure (Cone Tree 2)
28
Human centred
  • Two main areas
  • Exploit the user's real world experience, by
    representing information spaces using real world
    metaphors
  • Allow the user themselves to organise the
    information in a manner that they find intuitive

29
Human centred Exploit user experience
30
Human centred User themselves organise data
31
Visual Information Seeking 1
  • Research by Ben Schneiderman
  • Direct-manipulation interfaces
  • Certain tasks a visual presentation is much
    easier to comprehend than text
  • Mantra Overview first, zoom and filter, then
    details on demand

32
Visual Information Seeking 2
  • Schneiderman 7 Data Types
  • 1-, 2-, 3-d data, temporal, multi-dimensional,
    tree and network data
  • All items have attributes and simple search task
    is to find all items which a certain set of
    attributes

33
Visual Information Seeking 3
  • Overview of a collection
  • Zoom on items of interest
  • Filter out uninteresting items
  • Details-on-Demand of a item or group of items
  • Relate relationship between items
  • History Extract

34
Combining Sound Visual retrieval
  • Aural presentation contains addition information
    not found in visual representations
  • Omni directional information
  • Encoding of information, multiple streams
  • Cocktail Party Effect - Arons 1992
  • Recognition of sounds, is most often sufficient
    to hear only 500 ms to 2 seconds of the
    characteristic or significant part of a sound
    (Warren 1999)

35
Further Readings
  • Chen, C. (1999) Information Visualisation and
    Virtual Environments
  • Card, S et al (1999) Readings in Information
    Visualization Using Vision to Think
  • Spence, R. (2001) Information Visualization
  • http//www.cribbin.co.uk/infovis.htm
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