Does This Have a Particular Meaning?: Interactive Pattern Explanation for Network Visualizations
Xinhuan Shu - Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom. University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Alexis Pister - University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Junxiu Tang - Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China
Fanny Chevalier - University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Benjamin Bach - Inria, Bordeaux, France. University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
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Keywords
Visualization education, network visualization
Abstract
This paper presents an interactive technique to explain visual patterns in network visualizations to analysts who do not understand these visualizations and who are learning to read them. Learning a visualization requires mastering its visual grammar and decoding information presented through visual marks, graphical encodings, and spatial configurations. To help people learn network visualization designs and extract meaningful information, we introduce the concept of interactive pattern explanation that allows viewers to select an arbitrary area in a visualization, then automatically mines the underlying data patterns, and explains both visual and data patterns present in the viewer’s selection. In a qualitative and a quantitative user study with a total of 32 participants, we compare interactive pattern explanations to textual-only and visual-only (cheatsheets) explanations. Our results show that interactive explanations increase learning of i) unfamiliar visualizations, ii) patterns in network science, and iii) the respective network terminology.