Visualization Bibliography Update Form
The Visualization (VIS) Bibliography consists of VIS papers that have been classified into the categories below by their own authors. Use this form to add papers you have authored to the Visualization Bibliography.
Part I: Title/Author Information
Title of Your Paper
First Author
First Name :
Last Name :
MI :
Email Address of Contact Author:
Other Authors
If the paper is available on the web, please give its URL (leave blank otherwise)
Part II: Publication Information
Please complete the most applicable row from the table below, and then go on to Part III.
Published In
Publication Name
Location
Date
Pages
Conference Proceedings:
Please give the full name of the conference(e.g. 1997 IEEE Symposium on ...)
City
State/Country
Month
Year
Pages
From
To
Journal:
Journal Name
Month
Year
Pages
From
To
Technical Report:
Report No.
Institution
City
State/Country
Month
Year
Other:
Please provide the information about the publication in which your paper appeared (including publication name, year, month, page numbers, and all other usual information)
Part III: Categories
Select as many as apply to the
main theme
of the paper (typically about 3 categories will reflect the main theme). When deciding whether to select a general category or a more specific one, always choose the most specific that applies.
VIS: Visualization
VIS-I. Techniques
A. Interaction with Vizualizations
1. Navigation and Filtering
a. Dynamic Queries
b. Zooming
c. Moving between Overview and Detail
2. Interactive Analysis
3. Annotation (e.g., Highlighting)
B. Output
1. Visualization Structures (e.g., Information crystal, Cone trees, Information mural)
2. Focus + Context
a. Fisheye Views
b. Lenses
c. Distorted Views
d. Alternate Geometry
3. Automatic Layout
a. Semi-Automatic Layout
b. Graph/Network Layout
c. Tree/Hierarchy Layout
4. Visualization of Dynamically Changing Data
5. Animation Techniques
6. Use of Color
7. Techniques for Multiple Dimensions
8. Text-Oriented Visualization Techniques
9. Use of Sound in Visualizations
10. Promotion of Scalability
C. Specification of Visualizations
1. Paradigms for Explicit Specification of Visualizations
2. AI/Knowledge-Based Specification of Visualizations
VIS-II. Application (purpose) of Visualization
A. Presentation and Communication Purposes
1. Visualization for Analysis and Statistics
2. Visualization for Education
3. Visualization for Documentation
4. Visualization for Decision Support
B. Exploratory Purposes
1. Visualization for Browsing
2. Visualization for Searching
3. Visualization for Correctness and Maintenance
4. Visualization for Testing
VIS-III. Effectiveness of Visualization
A. Formal Quantitative Empirical Studies of Visualization
B. Qualitative/Observational Studies of Visualization
C. Design of Studies of Visualization's Effectiveness
D. Cognitive Issues of Visualization
E. Principles of Visual Perception
F. Design Principles of Visualization System
VIS-IV. Domain of Visualization
A. Information Visualization
1. Software Visualization
a. Algorithm Visualization
(1) Visualization of Specific Algorithms
b. Data Structure Visualization
c. Execution Structure Visualization (e.g., Run-Time Heap, Run-Time Stack, etc)
d. Code Visualization
(1) Visualization of History and Version Control
e. Visualization of Software Attributes and Interactions
(1) Visualization of Control Flow
(2) Visualization of Data Flow
(3) Visualization of Program Slices
(4) Visualization of Message Flow
(5) Visualization of Calls
(6) Visualization of Inheritance
(7) Visualization of Performance
f. Visualization of Paradigm-Specific Content
(1) Visualization of Concurrent and Parallel Languages
(2) Visualization of Constraint-Based Languages
(3) Visualization of Data-Flow Languages
(4) Visualization of Form-Based and Spreadsheet-Based Languages
(5) Visualization of Functional Languages
(6) Visualization of Imperative Languages
(7) Visualization of Logic Languages
(8) Visualization of Multi-Paradigm Languages
(9) Visualization of Object Oriented languages
(10) Visualization of Programming-by-Demonstration Languages
(11) Visualization of Rule-Based Languages
2. Web Visualization
3. Document Visualization
4. Database Visualization
5. Business Visualization
6. Visualization of Software Engineering Processes
B. Geographical Information System Visualization
C. Scientific Visualization (Physical Processes)
Enter any other keywords that are appropriate for this paper.
Back to the VL Bibliography
This page created by Frank Cort and
Margaret Burnett
.
Send suggestions and questions about this form to
burnett@cs.orst.edu
.