The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking

abstract: Node-link diagrams are widely used to visualize the relational structure of real world datasets. As identical data can be visualized in infinite ways by simply changing the spatial arrangement of the nodes, one of the important research topics of the graph drawing community is to visualize...

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Other Authors: Liu, Qing (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34899
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-34899
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-348992018-06-22T03:06:36Z The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking abstract: Node-link diagrams are widely used to visualize the relational structure of real world datasets. As identical data can be visualized in infinite ways by simply changing the spatial arrangement of the nodes, one of the important research topics of the graph drawing community is to visualize the data in the way that can facilitate people's comprehension. The last three decades have witnessed the growth of algorithms for automatic visualization. However, despite the popularity of node-link diagrams and the enthusiasm in improving computational efficiency, little is known about how people read these graphs and what factors (layout, size, density, etc.) have impact on their effectiveness (the usability aspect of the graph, e.g., are they easy to understand?). This thesis is comprehensive research to investigate the factors that affect people's understanding of node-link diagrams using eye-tracking methods. Three experiments were conducted, including 1) a pilot study with 22 participants to explore the layout and size effect; 2) an eye tracking experiment with 43 participants to investigate the layout, size and density effect on people's graph comprehension using abstract node-link diagram and generic tasks; and 3) an eye tracking experiment with the same participants to investigate the same effects using a real visualization analytic application. Results showed that participants' spatial reasoning ability had significant impact on people's graph reading performance. Layout, size, and density were all found to be significant effects under different task circumstances. The applicability of the eye tracking methods on visualization evaluation has been confirmed by providing detailed evidence that demonstrates the cognitive process of participants' graph reading behavior. Dissertation/Thesis Liu, Qing (Author) McKenna, Ann (Advisor) Jennifer, Jennifer (Committee member) Cooke, Nancy (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Cognitive psychology Computer science Engineering eye tracking information graphics visualization evaluation eng 149 pages Doctoral Dissertation Engineering 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34899 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Cognitive psychology
Computer science
Engineering
eye tracking
information graphics
visualization evaluation
spellingShingle Cognitive psychology
Computer science
Engineering
eye tracking
information graphics
visualization evaluation
The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking
description abstract: Node-link diagrams are widely used to visualize the relational structure of real world datasets. As identical data can be visualized in infinite ways by simply changing the spatial arrangement of the nodes, one of the important research topics of the graph drawing community is to visualize the data in the way that can facilitate people's comprehension. The last three decades have witnessed the growth of algorithms for automatic visualization. However, despite the popularity of node-link diagrams and the enthusiasm in improving computational efficiency, little is known about how people read these graphs and what factors (layout, size, density, etc.) have impact on their effectiveness (the usability aspect of the graph, e.g., are they easy to understand?). This thesis is comprehensive research to investigate the factors that affect people's understanding of node-link diagrams using eye-tracking methods. Three experiments were conducted, including 1) a pilot study with 22 participants to explore the layout and size effect; 2) an eye tracking experiment with 43 participants to investigate the layout, size and density effect on people's graph comprehension using abstract node-link diagram and generic tasks; and 3) an eye tracking experiment with the same participants to investigate the same effects using a real visualization analytic application. Results showed that participants' spatial reasoning ability had significant impact on people's graph reading performance. Layout, size, and density were all found to be significant effects under different task circumstances. The applicability of the eye tracking methods on visualization evaluation has been confirmed by providing detailed evidence that demonstrates the cognitive process of participants' graph reading behavior. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Engineering 2015
author2 Liu, Qing (Author)
author_facet Liu, Qing (Author)
title The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking
title_short The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking
title_full The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking
title_fullStr The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking
title_full_unstemmed The Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques Using Eye Tracking
title_sort evaluation of information visualization techniques using eye tracking
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34899
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