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Thoughts on Visualization as a Field of Research and as a Discipline July 17, 2007 Dagstuhl.

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Presentation on theme: "Thoughts on Visualization as a Field of Research and as a Discipline July 17, 2007 Dagstuhl."— Presentation transcript:

1 Thoughts on Visualization as a Field of Research and as a Discipline July 17, 2007 Dagstuhl

2 A General Research Goal Develop, enhance, and support Visual Reasoning. Interactive visualization combined with analytical reasoning provide a unique capability for attacking hard, large-scale problems. We should lead in the development of the solutions of these sorts of problems.

3 Hard Problems Problems involving large, multifaceted data from multiple sources and complex, open-ended analyses that must involve humans. Some examples -Large scale, exploratory text analysis -Biological system analyses (bioinformatics) -Time-dependent financial analytics (fraud, risk, compliance, business intelligence) -Large scale environmental computer experiments -Exploratory multimedia analysis For these problems, visualization is a necessary component and visual reasoning a key process. This is worth doing because it will advance our field intellectually, in terms of funding, and in terms of growth in number of researchers and students.

4 Visual Reasoning Reasoning: the process of distinguishing between ideas, creating insights, new relations, based on evidence. Reasoning involve building and testing hypotheses. (Visualization integrated with analytical reasoning) Hypothesis Argument Model We can build a reasoning structure around this, but this must be the core. The structure must include exploration, discovery, hypothesis-building, evidence-gathering, acceptance, or refutation.

5 Visual Reasoning Knowledge Visualization …ability to distinguish between ideas… …insights…relations…reasoning artifacts …models or arguments…hypotheses Among other things, a knowledge visualization approach will provide design principles, for example, -How to effectively support exploration. -Defining the role of interaction (cognitively) -Determining the (task-dependent) value of specific visualizations and thus determining what to visualize.

6 Visualization as a Discipline

7 Act Like a Discipline What is our curriculum? Where are our textbooks!? What are the Job and Career Opportunities of our students and practitioners?

8 Teach Visual Literacy Companies don’t understand. Students don’t understand (People in the GIS community have been talking about a similar thing, “Teaching spatial literacy”. We can learn from each other.) The public doesn’t understand what visualization is about & what it’s effective for. This requires a broader perspective in our curriculum. A general goal would be to achieve visual literacy for the general literate public.

9 An Example: GIS Curriculum Questions Asked Annual demand by professionals for GIS course work ? Annual demand for GIS students enrolled in universities? How many US certificate-granting programs? Shortfall in producing individuals with an advanced level of GIS education? Classification of GIS professionals and educational market segments?


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