DocumentCode
57479
Title
Exploring Curved Schematization of Territorial Outlines
Author
van Goethem, Arthur ; Meulemans, Wouter ; Speckmann, Bettina ; Wood, Jo
Author_Institution
Dept. of Math. & Comput. Sci., Tech. Univ. Eindhoven, Eindhoven, Netherlands
Volume
21
Issue
8
fYear
2015
fDate
Aug. 1 2015
Firstpage
889
Lastpage
902
Abstract
Hand-drawn schematized maps traditionally make extensive use of curves. However, there are few automated approaches for curved schematization; most previous work focuses on straight lines. We present a new algorithm for area-preserving curved schematization of territorial outlines. Our algorithm converts a simple polygon into a schematic crossing-free representation using circular arcs. We use two basic operations to iteratively replace consecutive arcs until the desired complexity is reached. Our results are not restricted to arcs ending at input vertices. The method can be steered towards different degrees of “curviness”: we can encourage or discourage the use of arcs with a large central angle via a single parameter. Our method creates visually pleasing results even for very low output complexities. To evaluate the effectiveness of our design choices, we present a geometric evaluation of the resulting schematizations. Besides the geometric qualities of our algorithm, we also investigate the potential of curved schematization as a concept. We conducted an online user study investigating the effectiveness of curved schematizations compared to straight-line schematizations. While the visual complexity of curved shapes was judged higher than that of straight-line shapes, users generally preferred curved schematizations. We observed that curves significantly improved the ability of users to match schematized shapes of moderate complexity to their unschematized equivalents.
Keywords
computational complexity; computational geometry; area-preserving curved schematization; central angle; circular arcs; curviness degrees; geometric evaluation; geometric qualities; hand-drawn schematized maps; input vertices; output complexities; polygons; schematic crossing-free representation; territorial outlines; visual complexity; Accuracy; Algorithm design and analysis; Clocks; Complexity theory; Shape; Topology; Visualization; Schematization; algorithm; circular arcs; user study;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Visualization and Computer Graphics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1077-2626
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TVCG.2015.2401025
Filename
7035078
Link To Document