Lecture 10: Other Perceptual Channels, Gestalt
The lecture will be based on
slides as well.
Today we are going to end the discussion on perceptual channels, and
talk about Gestalt principles.
Reading Material
Today’s lecture includes a larger number of references to recent
academic work. This is all optional reading material (they will not
be on the midterm or final). But if you are interested in learning
data visualization more deeply, you are strongly encouraged to read
these carefully.
- Curve-Centric Volume Reformation for Comparative Visualization. Daae
Lampe, Correa, Ma, and Hauser. IEEE VIS 2009.
- Quantitative Texton Sequences for Legible Bivariate Maps. Colin
Ware, IEEE VIS 2009.
- http://www.cs.tufts.edu/~remco/publications/2014/InfoVis2014-JND.pdf. Harrison,
Yang, Franconeri, Chang, IEEE VIS 2014.
- Product Plots,
Wickham and Hoffman, IEEE VIS 2011
- Visualizing Statistical Mix Effects and Simpson’s Paradox. Armstrong
and Wattenberg, IEEE VIS 2014