Many Views Are Not Enough: Designing for Synoptic Insights in Cultural Collections

Florian Windhager, Saminu Salisu, Roger A. Leite, Velitchko Filipov, Silvia Miksch, Günther Schreder, Eva Mayr

View presentation:2021-10-27T17:45:00ZGMT-0600Change your timezone on the schedule page
2021-10-27T17:45:00Z
Exemplar figure, described by caption below
The PolyCube system of collection visualization provides a time-oriented distant viewing perspective on spatial, taxonomic and relational aspects of cultural collections, together with three other visualizations of the historical data dimension.
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Abstract

Cultural object collections attract and delight spectators since ancient times. Yet, they also easily overwhelm visitors due to their perceptual richness and associated information. Similarly, digitized collections appear as complex, multifaceted phenomena, which can be challenging to grasp and navigate. Though visualizations can create various types of collection overviews for that matter, they do not easily assemble into a “big picture” or lead to an integrated understanding. We introduce coherence techniques to maximize connections between multiple views and apply them to the prototype PolyCube system of collection visualization: with map, set, and network visualizations it makes spatial, categorical, and relational collection aspects visible. For the essential temporal dimension, it offers four different views: superimposition, animation, juxtaposition, and space-time cube representations. A user study confirmed that better integrated visualizations support synoptic, cross-dimensional insights. An outlook is dedicated to the system's applicability within other arts and humanities data domains.