A Multi-Level Typology of Abstract Visualization Tasks
University of British Columbia
Abstract
The considerable previous work characterizing visualization usage has focused on low-level tasks or interactions and high-level tasks, leaving a gap between them that is not addressed. This gap leads to a lack of distinction between the ends and means of a task, limiting the potential for rigorous analysis. We contribute a multi-level typology of visualization tasks to address this gap, distinguishing why and how a visualization task is performed, as well as what the task inputs and outputs are. Our typology allows complex tasks to be expressed as sequences of interdependent simpler tasks, resulting in concise and flexible descriptions for tasks of varying complexity and scope. It provides abstract rather than…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.72
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 100
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Computer science
- Visualization
- Typology
- Task (project management)
- Human–computer interaction
- Domain (mathematical analysis)
- Information visualization
- Data visualization
- Quality Education