Title of article :
The Perceptual Scalability of Visualization
Author/Authors :
Yost، نويسنده , , B.، نويسنده , , North، نويسنده , , C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Larger, higher resolution displays can be used to increase the scalability of information visualizations. But just how
much can scalability increase using larger displays before hitting human perceptual or cognitive limits? Are the same visualization
techniques that are good on a single monitor also the techniques that are best when they are scaled up using large, high-resolution
displays? To answer these questions we performed a controlled experiment on user performance time, accuracy, and subjective
workload when scaling up data quantity with different space-time-attribute visualizations using a large, tiled display. Twelve college
students used small multiples, embedded bar matrices, and embedded time-series graphs either on a 2 megapixel (Mp) display or
with data scaled up using a 32 Mp tiled display. Participants performed various overview and detail tasks on geospatially-referenced
multidimensional time-series data. Results showed that current designs are perceptually scalable because they result in a decrease
in task completion time when normalized per number of data attributes along with no decrease in accuracy. It appears that, for the
visualizations selected for this study, the relative comparison between designs is generally consistent between display sizes.
However, results also suggest that encoding is more important on a smaller display while spatial grouping is more important on a
larger display. Some suggestions for designers are provided based on our experience designing visualizations for large displays.
Keywords :
empirical evaluation. , Information Visualization , large displays
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VISUALIZATION AND COMPUTER GRAPHICS
Journal title :
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VISUALIZATION AND COMPUTER GRAPHICS