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Mao Lin Huang University of Technology, Sydney, Visual Representations of Data and Knowledge
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2 Rendering Effective Route Maps
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3 General Idea Automatically generate a route map that has the same properties as a hand drawn map. Hand drawn maps: Exaggerated Lengths (non-constant scale factor) No irrelevant information
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4 More Specifically Constant scale factor Road lengths on a conventional map vary in several orders of magnitude => small roads and neighborhoods are hard to navigate with large maps Information irrelevant to navigation Names of locations, places, cities, etc. that are all far away from the route Takes up space that would be otherwise useful for showing crossroads and relevant landmarks
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5 Generalization Techniques Generalize Length Use more space for short roads, less for longer ones. Distribute based on importance, not physical length Generalize Angle Align roads or make room for others Generalize Shape Navigator doesn’t need to know roads shape. Simpler roads are easier to differentiate on a map.
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6 Demo at mapblast.com
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7 Simple Visualization Model Data View Port Visual Mapping
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8 Film Data Table Example: Attributes
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9 Visual Mapping Define a Space Map: data marks Map: data attributes graphical mark attributes Year X Length Y Popularity size Subject color Award? shape
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10 Example: FilmFinder 38
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11 Example: FilmFinder 39
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12 Use of graphical time scales as an approach to visualize histories. [Time Scale + History = Intuitive]
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15 Patient Records
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16 Galaxies Projection of clustering algorithms into 2D Galaxies are clusters of related data Proximity of galaxies is relevant Designed to add temporal patterns to clustering
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17 Galaxies
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3D Visualization & VR Techniques
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19 3D Cone Tree 16
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20 3D Cone Trees research.microsoft.com/~ggr/gi97.ppt 17
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21 Perspective Wall research.microsoft.com/~ggr/gi97.ppt 18
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22 Example: 3D-Room (The Exploratory) Robertson, Card, and Mackinlay (1989) 20
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23 3D Navigation Task (Hallway) research.microsoft.com/~ggr/gi97.ppt 21
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24 3D GUI for Web Browsing 22
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25 3D GUI for Web Browsing http://research.microsoft.com/ui/TaskGallery/index.htm 23
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26 Web Forager http://research.microsoft.com/ui/TaskGallery/index.htm 24
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27 WebBook research.microsoft.com/~ggr/gi97.ppt 25
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28 3D GUI for Desktop http://research.microsoft.com/ui/TaskGallery/index.htm 26
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30 ThemeScape Abstract 3D landscape of information Reduce cognitive load using terrain Elevation, colour encode theme strength redundantly Landscape metaphor translates well Peaks are easy to recognize Interesting characteristics include ridges and valleys
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31 ThemeScape
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32 ThemeScape
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33 Calendar Based Visualization Using 3 dimensions X-axis: Time of day Y-axis: Days of data period Z-axis: Univariate data samples
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34 Calendar Based Visualization
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35 Calendar Based Visualization
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36 Graph-Driven Visualization of Relational Data An example of visualizing relational data. This is the visualization of a family tree (graph). Here each image node represents a person and the edges represent relationships among these people in a large family. Graph Visualization
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37 Classical Graph Layouts Link-node diagrams Layout algorithms (graph drawing) Geometric positioning of nodes & edges Small amount of nodes Avoid node overlaps Reduce edge crossings hierarchical force-directed orthogonal symmetric radial layout
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38 Using a very large virtual page The virtual page technique predefines the drawing of the whole graph, and then provides a small window and scroll bar to allow the user to navigate through it (by changing the viewing area).
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39 Fish-eye views The fish-eye technique can keep a detailed picture of a part of a graph as well as the global context of the graph. It changes the zoomed focus point.
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40 3D Graph Drawing SGI fsn file-system viewer Image from: http://www.sgi.com/fun/images/fs n.map2.jpg
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Trees
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42 2 Approaches Connection (node & link) Enclosure (node in node) Structure vs. attributes Attributes only (multi-dimensional viz) Structure only (1 attribute, e.g. name) Structure + attributes A CB A BC
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43 Containment Approach
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44 Treemaps (Shneiderman) Slice and Dice Alternate horizontal and vertical cuts for levels Node area node attribute Zoom onto nodes Space-Filling Structure + 3 attributes Area, color, label
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45 Treemaps
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46 Balanced trees
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47 Treemaps ~ 1000 nodes Quantitative attributes Good combination of structure + attributes For unbalanced trees, structure more difficult Learning time: 20 min Evaluation: major performance boost over outliner Bad aspect ratios: long narrow rectangles Large scale or deep causes solid black
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48 Treemap Algorithm Calculate sizes: Recurse to children My size = sum children sizes Draw Treemap (node, space, direction) Draw node rectangle in space Alternate direction For each child: Calculate child space as % of node space using size and direction Draw Treemap (child, child space, direction)
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49 Cushion Treemaps
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50 Squared Treemaps
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51 Treemaps on the Web Map of the Market: http://www.smartmoney.com/marketmap/http://www.smartmoney.com/marketmap/ People Map: http://www.truepeers.com/http://www.truepeers.com/ Coffee Map: http://www.peets.com/tast/11/coffee_selector.asphttp://www.peets.com/tast/11/coffee_selector.asp
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52 DiskMapper http://www.miclog.com/dmdesc.htm
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53 2D Tree Drawing (web sitemap) MosiacG System Zyers and Stasko Image from: http://www.w3j.com/1/ayers.270/pap er/270.html
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54 PDQ Trees Overview+Detail of 2D layout Dynamic Queries on each level for pruning
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55 Space-Optimized Tree Layout A large data set of approximately 50 000 nodes My Unix root with approx. 3700 directories and files
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56 Hyperbolic tree The hyperbolic browser technique performs fish-eye viewing with animated transitions to preserve the user’s mental map. It changes both the viewing area and the zoomed focus point.
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57 H3 Image from: http://graphics.stanford.edu/papers/h3/fig/nab0.gif
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