Title :
Hummod browser: An exploratory visualization tool for the analysis of whole-body physiology simulation data
Author :
Keqin Wu ; Jian Chen ; Pruett, William A. ; Hester, Robert L.
Abstract :
We present HumMod Browser, a multi-scale exploratory visualization tool that allows physiologists to explore human physiology simulation data with more than 6000 attributes. We first present a tag cloud technique to reveal the significance of time-varying attributes and then study how a chain of tag clouds can form an exploratory visuailzation that assist multiple dataset comparison and query. One purpose is to reduce the high cognitive workload of understanding complex interactions within the large attribute space. The HumMod Browser produced can give physiologists flexible control over the visualization displayed for quick understanding of complicated simulation results. The visualization is constructed through the metaphorical bubble interface to allow dynamic view controls and the data relationships and context informaiton unfold as physiologists querying groups of connected bubbles within the hierarchical or causal relationships. HumMod Browser contributions to the interaction design and provides multi-scale coordinated interactive exploration for a new type of physiological modeling data. Two case studies have been reported with real datasets containing more than 6000 physiology attributes, which provide supportive evidence on the usefulness of HumMod Browser in supporting effective large-attribute-space exploration.
Keywords :
data analysis; data visualisation; interactive systems; medical information systems; physiological models; query processing; user interfaces; HumMod Browser; causal relationships; cognitive workload; context informaiton; dynamic view control; hierarchical relationship; interaction design; large-attribute-space exploration; metaphorical bubble interface; multiple dataset comparison; multiple dataset query; multiscale coordinated interactive exploration; multiscale exploratory visualization tool; physiological modeling data; physiologist querying groups; tag cloud technique; whole-body physiology simulation data analysis; Browsers; Data models; Data visualization; Lungs; Physiology; Tag clouds; Visualization; Information visualization; design study; interaction; physiology;
Conference_Titel :
Biological Data Visualization (BioVis), 2013 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Atlanta, GA
DOI :
10.1109/BioVis.2013.6664352