Introduction What Is Visualization? History of Visualization Relationship between Visualization and Other Fields The Visualization Process Pseudocode Conventions The Scatterplot The Role of the User Related Readings Exercises Projects Data Foundations Types of Data Structure within and between Recor
Eye Tracking and Visualization: Foundations, Techniques, and Applications. ETVIS 2015
β Scribed by Michael Burch, Lewis Chuang, Brian Fisher, Albrecht Schmidt, Daniel Weiskopf (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 259
- Series
- Mathematics and Visualization
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book discusses research, methods, and recent developments in the interdisciplinary field that spans research in visualization, eye tracking, human-computer interaction, and psychology. It presents extended versions of papers from the First Workshop on Eye Tracking and Visualization (ETVIS), which was organized as a workshop of the IEEE VIS Conference 2015. Topics include visualization and visual analytics of eye-tracking data, metrics and cognitive models, eye-tracking experiments in the context of visualization interfaces, and eye tracking in 3D and immersive environments. The extended ETVIS papers are complemented by a chapter offering an overview of visualization approaches for analyzing eye-tracking data and a chapter that discusses electrooculography (EOG) as an alternative of acquiring information about eye movements. Covering scientific visualization, information visualization, and visual analytics, this book is a valuable resource for eye-tracking researchers within the visualization community.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
A Task-Based View on the Visual Analysis of Eye-Tracking Data....Pages 3-22
Interactive Visualization for Understanding of Attention Patterns....Pages 23-39
The VERP Explorer: A Tool for Exploring Eye Movements of Visual-Cognitive Tasks Using Recurrence Plots....Pages 41-55
Gaze Visualization for Immersive Video....Pages 57-71
Capturing You Watching You: Characterizing Visual-Motor Dynamics in Touchscreen Interactions....Pages 73-91
Visualizing Eye Movements in Formal Cognitive Models....Pages 93-111
Word-Sized Eye-Tracking Visualizations....Pages 113-128
GazeGIS: A Gaze-Based Reading and Dynamic Geographic Information System....Pages 129-147
Front Matter....Pages 149-149
Unsupervised Clustering of EOG as a Viable Substitute for Optical Eye Tracking....Pages 151-167
Accuracy of Monocular Gaze Tracking on 3D Geometry....Pages 169-184
3D Saliency from Eye Tracking with Tomography....Pages 185-198
Visual Data Cleansing of Low-Level Eye-Tracking Data....Pages 199-216
Visualizing Dynamic Ambient/Focal Attention with Coefficient (K) ....Pages 217-233
Eye Fixation Metrics for Large Scale Evaluation and Comparison of Information Visualizations....Pages 235-255
Back Matter....Pages 257-258
β¦ Subjects
Visualization;User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction;Computer Graphics;Statistics for Engineering, Physics, Computer Science, Chemistry and Earth Sciences
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Introduction What Is Visualization? History of Visualization Relationship between Visualization and Other Fields The Visualization Process Pseudocode Conventions The Scatterplot The Role of the User Related Readings Exercises Projects Data Foundations Types of Data Structure within and between Recor
<P><EM>An Updated Guide to the Visualization of Data for Designers, Users, and Researchers</EM></P> <P><STRONG>Interactive Data Visualization: Foundations, Techniques, and Applications, Second Edition</STRONG> provides all the theory, details, and tools necessary to build visualizations and systems
Visualization and visual analytics are powerful concepts for exploring data from various application domains. The endless number of possible parameters and the many ways to combine visual variables as well as algorithms and interaction techniques create lots of possibilities for building such techni
<p>Background A group of UKexperts on Scientific Visualization and its associated applications gathered at The Cosener's House in Abingdon, OxfordΒ shire (UK) in February 1991 to consider all aspects of scientific visualization and to produce a number of documents: β’ a detailed summary of current kn