Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts

To improve visualization, it is necessary to optimize the design by analyzing the behavior of users as well as improving the evaluation index of the computational experiment and the task performance (e.g., the correct answer rate and completion time) in the user experiment. Although various studies...

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Main Authors: Yuki Ueno, Hiroaki Natsukawa, Nozomi Aoyama, Koji Koyamada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-03-01
Series:Visual Informatics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468502X19300208
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spelling doaj-850b45cebca9481891463d694558122e2020-11-24T21:09:43ZengElsevierVisual Informatics2468-502X2019-03-01313847Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layoutsYuki Ueno0Hiroaki Natsukawa1Nozomi Aoyama2Koji Koyamada3Department of Electrical Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto, JapanAcademic Center for Computing and Media Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan; Corresponding author.Department of Electrical Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto, JapanAcademic Center for Computing and Media Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, JapanTo improve visualization, it is necessary to optimize the design by analyzing the behavior of users as well as improving the evaluation index of the computational experiment and the task performance (e.g., the correct answer rate and completion time) in the user experiment. Although various studies have investigated the influence of user behavior on the evaluation of visualization, majority of these studies focused on simple visualization tasks. A simple task does not indicate a simple visualization comprising a few visualization elements but a task in which the information obtained from visualization is the only clue for completing the task. However, a few studies have targeted complicated tasks in which multiple information obtained from visualization is considered to be a clue for completing the task regardless of the number of elements that are contained in the visualization. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the behavior of the participants who have performed complicated tasks. We selected two types of group-in-a-box (GIB) layouts, which can be considered to be a complicated visualization method, as the target of the user experiment. In the user experiment, participants were asked to perform an exploration task specific to GIB layouts; which group has the maximum number of intra-edges? We also collected the eye-tracking data in addition to task performance. The results showed that the correct answer rate is considerably affected by the visualization factor; whether the correct answer, the box with maximum number of intra-edges, is the box with the largest area. Furthermore, an analysis of the collected eye-tracking data revealed that this visualization factor affected the exploration behavior of the participants; however, it did not affect the location at which the participants were focused on. The obtained results indicated that the visualization elements that were not considered by the visualization designer can influence the task of extracting information from the data. Therefore, designers have to configure the visualization by considering the visual cognitive behavior of the users. Keywords: Visual search, Eye-tracking, Group-in-a-box layouthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468502X19300208
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yuki Ueno
Hiroaki Natsukawa
Nozomi Aoyama
Koji Koyamada
spellingShingle Yuki Ueno
Hiroaki Natsukawa
Nozomi Aoyama
Koji Koyamada
Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
Visual Informatics
author_facet Yuki Ueno
Hiroaki Natsukawa
Nozomi Aoyama
Koji Koyamada
author_sort Yuki Ueno
title Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
title_short Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
title_full Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
title_fullStr Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
title_full_unstemmed Exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
title_sort exploration behavior of group-in-a-box layouts
publisher Elsevier
series Visual Informatics
issn 2468-502X
publishDate 2019-03-01
description To improve visualization, it is necessary to optimize the design by analyzing the behavior of users as well as improving the evaluation index of the computational experiment and the task performance (e.g., the correct answer rate and completion time) in the user experiment. Although various studies have investigated the influence of user behavior on the evaluation of visualization, majority of these studies focused on simple visualization tasks. A simple task does not indicate a simple visualization comprising a few visualization elements but a task in which the information obtained from visualization is the only clue for completing the task. However, a few studies have targeted complicated tasks in which multiple information obtained from visualization is considered to be a clue for completing the task regardless of the number of elements that are contained in the visualization. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the behavior of the participants who have performed complicated tasks. We selected two types of group-in-a-box (GIB) layouts, which can be considered to be a complicated visualization method, as the target of the user experiment. In the user experiment, participants were asked to perform an exploration task specific to GIB layouts; which group has the maximum number of intra-edges? We also collected the eye-tracking data in addition to task performance. The results showed that the correct answer rate is considerably affected by the visualization factor; whether the correct answer, the box with maximum number of intra-edges, is the box with the largest area. Furthermore, an analysis of the collected eye-tracking data revealed that this visualization factor affected the exploration behavior of the participants; however, it did not affect the location at which the participants were focused on. The obtained results indicated that the visualization elements that were not considered by the visualization designer can influence the task of extracting information from the data. Therefore, designers have to configure the visualization by considering the visual cognitive behavior of the users. Keywords: Visual search, Eye-tracking, Group-in-a-box layout
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468502X19300208
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