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Learn How to Design Effective Visualization Systems Visualization
Analysis and Design provides a systematic, comprehensive framework
for thinking about visualization in terms of principles and design
choices. The book features a unified approach encompassing
information visualization techniques for abstract data, scientific
visualization techniques for spatial data, and visual analytics
techniques for interweaving data transformation and analysis with
interactive visual exploration. It emphasizes the careful
validation of effectiveness and the consideration of function
before form. The book breaks down visualization design according to
three questions: what data users need to see, why users need to
carry out their tasks, and how the visual representations proposed
can be constructed and manipulated. It walks readers through the
use of space and color to visually encode data in a view, the
trade-offs between changing a single view and using multiple linked
views, and the ways to reduce the amount of data shown in each
view. The book concludes with six case studies analyzed in detail
with the full framework. The book is suitable for a broad set of
readers, from beginners to more experienced visualization
designers. It does not assume any previous experience in
programming, mathematics, human-computer interaction, or graphic
design and can be used in an introductory visualization course at
the graduate or undergraduate level.
Displaying multiple levels of data visually has been proposed to
address the challenge of limited screen space. Although many
previous empirical studies have addressed different aspects of this
question, the information visualization research community does not
currently have a clearly articulated consensus on how, when, or
even if displaying data at multiple levels is effective. To shed
more light on this complex topic, we conducted a systematic review
of 22 existing multi-level interface studies to extract high-level
design guidelines. To facilitate discussion, we cast our analysis
findings into a four-point decision tree: (1) When are multi-level
displays useful? (2) What should the higher visual levels display?
(3) Should the different visual levels be displayed simultaneously,
or one at a time? (4) Should the visual levels be embedded in a
single display, or separated into multiple displays? Our analysis
resulted in three design guidelines: (1) the number of levels in
display and data should match; (2) high visual levels should only
display task-relevant information; (3) simultaneous display, rather
than temporal switching, is suitable for tasks with multi-level
answers. Table of Contents: Introduction / Terminology /
Methodology / Summary of Studies / Decision 1: Single or
Multi-level Interface? / Decision 2: How to Create the High-Level
Displays? / Decision 3: Simultaneous or Temporal Displays of the
Multiple Visual Levels / Decision 4: How to Spatially Arrange the
Visual Levels, Embedded or Separate? / Limitations of Study /
Design Recommendations / Discussion and Future Work
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