DocumentCode :
1303767
Title :
Beyond Bertin: Seeing the Forest despite the Trees
Author :
Ziemkiewicz, C. ; Kosara, R.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA
Volume :
30
Issue :
5
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
7
Lastpage :
11
Abstract :
Visualization is at a point in its development where its practitioners frequently find themselves grappling with big questions about its nature and purpose. These include fundamental questions about how visualization works-that is, how do people interpret visual forms as information? However, the answers to this question haven´t evolved greatly since visualization´s early days. The classical view is that visualization is a process of encoding numerical or categorical values as visual (or retinal) variables such as size, distance, or color, which the viewer then decodes to reconstruct the original information. This variable-encoding model is the simplified essence of Jacques Bertin´s Semiology of Graphics and the years of visualization theory that have built upon it, including Jock Mackinlay´s work on automated presentation design and Leland Wilkinson´s The Grammar of Graphics.
Keywords :
data visualisation; encoding; data visualization theory; numerical encoding process; variable-encoding model; Data models; Data visualization; Image color analysis; Semantics; Shape; Visualization; computer graphics; graphics and multimedia; information visualization; visual design; visual structure; visualization theory;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Computer Graphics and Applications, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0272-1716
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MCG.2010.83
Filename :
5556729
Link To Document :
بازگشت