
Information Visualization
Human-Centered Issues and Perspectives
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 18. July 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
IX, 177 pages
978-3-540-70955-8 (ISBN)
Description
FromMay28toJune1,2007,aseminaron"InformationVisualization-Human- Centered Issues in Visual Representation, Interaction, and Evaluation" ( 07221) took place at the International Conference and Research Center for Computer Science, Dagstuhl Castle, Germany. The center was initiated by the German government to promote informatics research at an international level. It seeks to foster dialog among the computer science research community, advance a- demic education and professional development, and transfer knowledge between academia and industry. The primary feature of Dagstuhl is its series of week-long seminars on v- ious topics in computer science. Dagstuhl seminars are frequently described as being the mostproductive academic events that the participantresearchershave ever experienced. The informal and friendly atmosphere fostered at the center promotes personal interaction between the guests. Traditionally, there is no set programfollowedat Dagstuhl seminars.Instead, the pace and the procedure are determined by the presentations o?ered during the seminar and the discussion results. Further general information about Dagstuhl seminars can be found on 1 the Dagstuhl Castle webpage .
Information visualization (InfoVis) is a relatively new research area, which focuses on the use of visualization techniques to help people understand and analyze data. While related ?elds such as scienti?c visualization involve the p- sentation of data that has some physical or geometric correspondence, infor- tionvisualizationcentersonabstractinformationwithoutsuchcorrespondences, i.e., information that cannot be mapped into the physical world in most cases.
Information visualization (InfoVis) is a relatively new research area, which focuses on the use of visualization techniques to help people understand and analyze data. While related ?elds such as scienti?c visualization involve the p- sentation of data that has some physical or geometric correspondence, infor- tionvisualizationcentersonabstractinformationwithoutsuchcorrespondences, i.e., information that cannot be mapped into the physical world in most cases.
More details
Series
Edition
2008 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Publishing group
Springer Berlin
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Illustrations
IX, 177 p.
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
295 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-540-70955-8 (9783540709558)
DOI
10.1007/978-3-540-70956-5
Schweitzer Classification
Content
General Reflections.- The Value of Information Visualization.- Evaluating Information Visualizations.- Theoretical Foundations of Information Visualization.- Teaching Information Visualization.- Specific Aspects.- Creation and Collaboration: Engaging New Audiences for Information Visualization.- Process and Pitfalls in Writing Information Visualization Research Papers.- Visual Analytics: Definition, Process, and Challenges.