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Mobile Data Visualization AK Peters Visualization Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Lee Bongshin, Dachselt Raimund, Isenberg Petra, Choe Eun Kyoung

Couverture de l’ouvrage Mobile Data Visualization

Mobile Data Visualization is about facilitating access to and understanding of data on mobile devices. Wearable trackers, mobile phones, and tablets are used by millions of people each day to read weather maps, financial charts, or personal health meters. What is required to create e­ffective visualizations for mobile devices? This book introduces key concepts of mobile data visualization and discusses opportunities and challenges from both research and practical perspectives.

Mobile Data Visualization is the first book to provide an overview of how to e­ffectively visualize, analyze, and communicate data on mobile devices. Drawing from the expertise, research, and experience of an international range of academics and practitioners from across the domains of Visualization, Human Computer Interaction, and Ubiquitous Computing, the book explores the challenges of mobile visualization and explains how it diff­ers from traditional data visualization. It highlights opportunities for reaching new audiences with engaging, interactive, and compelling mobile content.

In nine chapters, this book presents interesting perspectives on mobile data visualization including: how to characterize and classify mobile visualizations; how to interact with them while on the go and with limited attention spans; how to adapt them to various mobile contexts; specific methods on how to design and evaluate them; reflections on privacy, ethical and other challenges, as well as an outlook to a future of ubiquitous visualization. This accessible book is a valuable and rich resource for visualization designers, practitioners, researchers, and students alike.

Preface, Editors, Contributors, Acknowledgements, Introduction to Mobile Data Visualization, Responsive Visualization Design for Mobile Devices, Interacting with Visualization on Mobile Devices, 3D Mobile Data Visualization, Characterizing Glanceable Visualizations: From Perception to Behavior Change, Evaluating Mobile Visualizations, Challenges in Everyday Use of Mobile Visualizations, Mobile Visualization Design: An Ideation Method to Try, Reflections on Ubiquitous Visualization, Index

Academic, Postgraduate, Professional, and Professional Practice & Development

Bongshin Lee is a Sr. Principal Researcher in the EPIC (Extended Perception Interaction Cognition) research group, part of Human-Computer Interaction Group (HCI@MSR), at Microsoft Research. She received her PhD in Computer Science from the University of Maryland, College Park in 2006. Bongshin’s research areas span data visualization, human-computer interaction, and human-data interaction, focusing on the design, development, and evaluation of novel data visualization and interaction techniques. The overarching goal of her research is to empower people to achieve their goals by leveraging data, data visualization, and technological advancements. Bongshin explores innovative ways to help people with different abilities to interact with data, by supporting easy and effective data collection, data exploration & analysis, and data-driven communication. Her most recent research endeavors include personal data visualization, data visualization on mobile devices, inclusive data visualization and multimodal interaction for data visualization. She is a member of the IEEE Visualization Academy and the IEEE Visualization Executive Committee.

Raimund Dachselt is a Full Professor of Computer Science at the Technische Universität Dresden, Germany. Since 2012, he leads the Interactive Media Lab Dresden at the Faculty of Computer Science. He received his PhD in 2004 from TU Dresden and was Professor for User Interface Engineering at the University of Magdeburg from 2007 to 2012. His research interests are at the intersection of natural, multimodal human computer interaction (HCI) and data visualization. He worked extensively in the area of interactive surfaces from smartwatches over tabletops to wall-sized displays and expanded the scope to Mixed Reality interfaces for immersive data analysis. He contributed several novel interface approaches for information visualization. He has co-authored more than 220 peer-reviewed publications and two major German H