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Movement as an Aid to Understanding Graphs
John Bovey, Peter Rodgers, and Florence Benoy
In Seventh International Conference on Information Visualization (IV03), pages 182-196. IEEE, July 2003.Abstract
This paper describes a graph visualization method that attempts to aid the understanding of graphs by adding continuous local movement to graph diagrams. The paper includes a discussion of some of the many different kinds of potential graph movement and then describes an empirical trial that was conducted to investigate whether one kind of movement helps with a particular graph comprehension task. Although the results of the trial are promising, the degree of benefit afforded by the movement varies between graphs and the paper includes a discussion about graph features which may account for this discrepancy.
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@inproceedings{1653, author = {John Bovey and Peter Rodgers and Florence Benoy}, title = {{Movement as an Aid to Understanding Graphs}}, month = {July}, year = {2003}, pages = {182-196}, keywords = {determinacy analysis, Craig interpolants}, note = {}, doi = {}, url = {http://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/pubs/2003/1653}, publication_type = {inproceedings}, submission_id = {9742_1058857753}, ISBN = {0-7695-1988-1}, booktitle = {Seventh International Conference on Information Visualization (IV03)}, publisher = {IEEE}, refereed = {yes}, }