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This book provides an overview of the field of visualization techniques for time-oriented data. It analyses the specifics and similarities of the investigated techniques in order to identify clusters for structuring and making the field manageable.

Time is an exceptional dimension that is common to many application domains such as medicine, engineering, business, or science. Due to the distinct characteristics of time, appropriate visual and analytical methods are required to explore and analyze them.This book starts with an introduction to visualization and historical examples of visual representations. At its core, the book presents and discusses a systematic view of the visualization of time-oriented data along three key questions: what is being visualized (data), why something is visualized (user tasks), and how it is presented (visual representation). To support visual exploration, interaction techniques and analytical methods are required that are discussed in separate chapters.A large part of this book is devoted to a structured survey of 101 different visualization techniques as a reference for scientists conducting related research as well as for practitioners seeking information on how their time-oriented data can best be visualized.

Arvustused

Fernando Berzal - ACM Computing Reviews 16 July 2012

There is no doubt about the importance of visualization in data analysis, whether for examining the unknown and suggesting novel approaches to explore, for confirming yet-to-be-proved hypotheses and abandoning future dead ends, or just for supporting someones ideas with visual aids in a presentation. In most situations, the data being analyzed includes a temporal dimension whose proper treatment might boost (or bust) the resolution of a given data analysis task. Hence a systematic treatise on the visualization of time-oriented data is welcome.

Four researchers from Vienna University of Technology in Austria and the University of Rostock in Germany have compiled this extensive catalog of visualization techniques where the temporal dimension plays a major role. Their book contains one-page descriptions of 101 different ways to represent the temporal dimension of data in two or three dimensions. The catalogued techniques include literally dozens of different ways to plot time series. Some have been devised for highlighting parallelisms among different time series when analyzing multivariate data, whereas others were designed for bringing the periodic nature of time into the spotlight. Many of them have been incorporated into data visualization tools for making efficient use of the limited screen real estate and some allow for the visualization of spatiotemporal data, where appropriate. The page devoted to each technique is beautifully illustrated with a relevant diagram or screen shot. Each page also includes a concise textual description of the rationale behind the technique under analysis and, almost as a footnote, the most pertinent bibliographic reference (in rare occasions, a handful of them).

The survey of visualization techniques comprises the second half of this nicely illustrated book. The first half tries to cover the intellectual foundation behind the visualization techniques themselves. A short introduction familiarizes us with the reasons behind the use of data visualization tools, that is, why we might need them and how they can support interactive data analysis. The introduction also describes how they are designed as visualization pipelines and the different reference models that have been proposed to describe their essence. A pleasant historical account of the evolution of the pictorial representation of time, from statistical charts to different artistic movements, paves the way for a more technical overview of how time is modeled in information systems to reflect the phenomena under consideration and support the analysis task at hand.

The visualization aspects are covered first, followed by the interaction and analytical support that current data visualization tools provide. With respect to data visualization, techniques are structured around three simple questions that also help categorize the 101 techniques in the survey: What? Why? How? The data to be represented (what) and the user tasks that must be supported (why) determine the visual representation mechanism (how). Some examples are given to illustrate the proper solution of data visualization problems, from ways to highlight the periodicity in temporal data to the different color- coding strategies that should be used to support different tasks (the same color scheme is not suitable for identification, localization, and comparison, for instance).

This book also includes a couple of chapters on features that every data visualization tool should support. The first of these chapters, on interaction, describes user intents, conceptual and technical considerations that should be taken into account, and methods such as direct manipulation, brushing & linking, or dynamic queries, as well as the use of event-based visualization. The second chapter, on analytics, merely touches the surface of a growing field, which deserves a much more elaborate treatment.

I agree with the authors plea for more effort on the integration of visual, interactive, and analytical methods for mining large and complex time-oriented data. For interactive data visualization tools, scalability issues are paramount if we want to study very long time series of large numbers of data in parallel. Newcomers to the field can certainly benefit from the authors description of the general architecture of visualization tools, the considerations they recommend with respect to visualization and interaction techniques, and the coarse taxonomy of visualization techniques they propose to structure their survey of visualization techniques. Combined, these provide the conceptual framework that could serve as the starting point for the new research that could make the authors plea a reality.

Foreword vii
Preface ix
About the Authors xi
Acknowledgements xiii
1 Introduction
1(14)
1.1 Introduction to Visualization
3(6)
1.2 Application Example
9(3)
1.3 Book Outline
12(1)
References
12(3)
2 Historical Background
15(30)
2.1 Classic Ways of Graphing Time
15(20)
2.2 Time in Visual Storytelling & Arts
35(7)
2.3 Summary
42(1)
References
43(2)
3 Time & Time-Oriented Data
45(24)
3.1 Modeling Time
46(16)
3.1.1 Design Aspects
47(6)
3.1.2 Granularities & Time Primitives
53(9)
3.2 Characterizing Data
62(2)
3.3 Relating Data & Time
64(1)
3.4 Summary
65(2)
References
67(2)
4 Visualization Aspects
69(36)
4.1 Characterization of the Visualization Problem
70(13)
4.1.1 What? - Time & Data
71(1)
4.1.2 Why? - User Tasks
72(4)
4.1.3 How? - Visual Representation
76(7)
4.2 Visualization Design Examples
83(16)
4.2.1 Data Level
83(4)
4.2.2 Task Level
87(8)
4.2.3 Presentation Level
95(4)
4.3 Summary
99(2)
References
101(4)
5 Interaction Support
105(22)
5.1 Motivation & User Intents
106(2)
5.2 Fundamental Principles
108(7)
5.3 Basic Methods
115(5)
5.4 Integrating Interactive and Automatic Methods
120(4)
5.5 Summary
124(1)
References
125(2)
6 Analytical Support
127(20)
6.1 Temporal Analysis Tasks
128(2)
6.2 Clustering
130(2)
6.3 Temporal Data Abstraction
132(5)
6.4 Principal Component Analysis
137(6)
6.5 Summary
143(1)
References
144(3)
7 Survey of Visualization Techniques
147(108)
7.1 Techniques
148(105)
7.2 Summary
253(1)
References
254(1)
8 Conclusion
255(14)
8.1 Summary
255(2)
8.2 Application Issues
257(2)
8.3 Research Challenges
259(4)
8.4 Visual Analytics
263(3)
References
266(3)
References 269(14)
Index 283