Lyra 2: Designing Interactive Visualizations by Demonstration
Jonathan Zong, Dhiraj Barnwal, Rupayan Neogy, Arvind Satyanarayan
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View presentation:2020-10-27T18:15:00ZGMT-0600Change your timezone on the schedule page
2020-10-27T18:15:00Z

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Direct link to video on YouTube: https://youtu.be/S7IAGCM33Fw
Keywords
Direct manipulation, interactive visualization, interaction design by demonstration
Abstract
Recent graphical interfaces offer direct manipulation mechanisms for authoring visualizations, but are largely restricted to static output. To author interactive visualizations, users must instead turn to textual specification, but such approaches impose a higher technical burden. To bridge this gap, we introduce Lyra 2, a system that extends a prior visualization design environment with novel methods for authoring interaction techniques by demonstration. Users perform an interaction (e.g., button clicks, drags, or key presses) directly on the visualization they are editing. The system interprets this performance using a set of heuristics and enumerates suggestions of possible interaction designs. These heuristics account for the properties of the interaction (e.g., target and event type) as well as the visualization (e.g., mark and scale types, and multiple views). Interaction design suggestions are displayed as thumbnails; users can preview and test these suggestions, iteratively refine them through additional demonstrations, and finally apply and customize them via property inspectors. We evaluate our approach through a gallery of diverse examples, and evaluate its usability through a first-use study and via an analysis of its cognitive dimensions. We find that, in Lyra 2, interaction design by demonstration enables users to rapidly express a wide range of interactive visualizations.