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Query: gansner_e* Results: 3 Sorted by: Date  Comments?
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[1] EDITED BOOK Handbook of Human Centric Visualization / Huang, Weidong 2014 n.29 p.743 Springer New York
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-7485-2
ISBN: 978-1-4614-7484-5 (print), 978-1-4614-7485-2 (online)
Online Access
== Part I: Visual Communication ==
Visualizing Thought (3-40)
	+ Tversky, Barbara
Gryphon: A 'Little' Domain-Specific Programming Language for Diffusion MRI Visualizations (41-61)
	+ Chen, Jian
	+ Cai, Haipeng
	+ Auchus, Alexander P.
	+ Laidlaw, David H.
Viewing Abstract Data as Maps (63-89)
	+ Gansner, Emden R.
	+ Hu, Yifan
	+ Kobourov, Stephen G.
== Part II: Theory and Science ==
Individual Differences and Translational Science in the Design of Human-Centered Visualizations (93-113)
	+ Green, Tera Marie
	+ Arias-Hernandez, Richard
	+ Fisher, Brian
Evaluating Visualization Environments: Cognitive, Social, and Cultural Perspectives (115-145)
	+ Hundhausen, Christopher D.
On the Prospects for a Science of Visualization (147-175)
	+ Rensink, Ronald A.
== Part III: Principles, Guidelines and Recommendations ==
Toward a Better Understanding and Application of the Principles of Visual Communication (179-201)
	+ Bae, Juhee
	+ Watson, Benjamin
Pep Up Your Time Machine: Recommendations for the Design of Information Visualizations of Time-Dependent Data (203-225)
	+ Kriglstein, Simone
	+ Pohl, Margit
	+ Smuc, Michael
Using Textbook Illustrations to Extract Design Principles for Algorithm Visualizations (227-249)
	+ Velázquez-Iturbide, J. Ángel
== Part IV: Methods ==
Conceptual Design for Sensemaking (253-283)
	+ Blandford, Ann
	+ Faisal, Sarah
	+ Attfield, Simon
An Introduction and Guide to Evaluation of Visualization Techniques Through User Studies (285-313)
	+ Forsell, Camilla
	+ Cooper, Matthew
User-Centered Evaluation of Information Visualization Techniques: Making the HCI-InfoVis Connection Explicit (315-336)
	+ Freitas, Carla M. D. S.
	+ Pimenta, Marcelo S.
	+ Scapin, Dominique L.
Eye Tracking on Visualizations: Progressive Extraction of Scanning Strategies (337-372)
	+ Goldberg, Joseph H.
	+ Helfman, Jonathan I.
Evaluating Overall Quality of Graph Visualizations Indirectly and Directly (373-390)
	+ Huang, Weidong
Visual Analysis of Eye Tracking Data (391-409)
	+ Raschke, Michael
	+ Blascheck, Tanja
	+ Burch, Michael
User Studies in Visualization: A Reflection on Methods (411-426)
	+ Tory, Melanie
== Part V: Perception and Cognition ==
On the Benefits and Drawbacks of Radial Diagrams (429-451)
	+ Burch, Michael
	+ Weiskopf, Daniel
Measuring Memories for Objects and Their Locations in Immersive Virtual Environments: The Subjective Component of Memorial Experience (453-471)
	+ Coxon, Matthew
	+ Mania, Katerina
Human-Centric Chronographics: Making Historical Time Memorable (473-511)
	+ Korallo, Liliya
	+ Davis, Stephen Boyd
	+ Foreman, Nigel
	+ Moar, Magnus
Visualizing Multiple Levels and Dimensions of Social Network Properties (513-525)
	+ McGrath, Cathleen
	+ Blythe, Jim
	+ Krackhardt, David
== Part VI: Dynamic Visualization ==
Adaptive Diagrams: A Research Agenda to Explore How Learners Can Manipulate Online Diagrams to Self-Manage Cognitive Load (529-550)
	+ Agostinho, Shirley
	+ Tindall-Ford, Sharon
	+ Bokosmaty, Sahar
Dynamic Visualisations and Motor Skills (551-580)
	+ Castro-Alonso, Juan Cristobal
	+ Ayres, Paul
	+ Paas, Fred
Dynamic Visualizations: A Two-Edged Sword?  (581-604)
	+ Lowe, Richard K.
Simultaneous and Sequential Presentation of Realistic and Schematic Instructional Dynamic Visualizations (605-622)
	+ Nugteren, Michelle L.
	+ Tabbers, Huib K.
	+ Scheiter, Katharina
	+ Paas, Fred
How Do You Connect Moving Dots? Insights from User Studies on Dynamic Network Visualizations (623-650)
	+ Smuc, Michael
	+ Federico, Paolo
	+ Windhager, Florian
	+ Aigner, Wolfgang
	+ Zenk, Lukas
	+ Miksch, Silvia
== Part VII: Interaction ==
Interaction Taxonomy for Tracking of User Actions in Visual Analytics Applications (653-670)
	+ von Landesberger, Tatiana
	+ Fiebig, Sebastian
	+ Bremm, Sebastian
	+ Kuijper, Arjan
	+ Fellner, Dieter W.
Common Visualizations: Their Cognitive Utility (671-691)
	+ Parsons, Paul
	+ Sedig, Kamran
Distribution of Information Processing While Performing Complex Cognitive Activities with Visualization Tools (693-715)
	+ Parsons, Paul
	+ Sedig, Kamran
Human-Centered Interactivity of Visualization Tools: Micro- and Macro-level Considerations (717-743)
	+ Sedig, Kamran
	+ Parsons, Paul
	+ Dittmer, Mark
	+ Haworth, Robert

[2] Putting recommendations on the map: visualizing clusters and relations Short papers / Gansner, Emden / Hu, Yifan / Kobourov, Stephen / Volinsky, Chris Proceedings of the 2009 ACM Conference on Recommender Systems 2009-10-23 p.345-348
ACM Digital Library Link
Summary: For users, recommendations can sometimes seem odd or counterintuitive. Visualizing recommendations can remove some of this mystery, showing how a recommendation is grouped with other choices. A drawing can also lead a user's eye to other options. Traditional 2D-embeddings of points can be used to create a basic layout, but these methods, by themselves, do not illustrate clusters and neighborhoods very well. In this paper, we propose the use of geographic maps to enhance the definition of clusters and neighborhoods, and consider the effectiveness of this approach in visualizing similarities and recommendations arising from TV shows.

[3] Visualizing software for telecommunication services Software visualization for specific domains / Gansner, Emden R. / Mocenigo, John M. / North, Stephen C. Proceedings of the ACM Symposium on Software Visualization 2003-09-16 p.151-ff
Keywords: algorithm animation, graph layout
ACM Digital Library Link
Summary: An active research area in telecommunications concerns how to specify and control the addition of new services, such as call waiting or instant messaging, into existing software. One approach is to rely on a component-based architecture such as Distributed Feature Composition (DFC), by which a new service can be specified as a composition of primitive features over time. Formally, a communication episode is represented by a dynamic graph of software feature boxes, called a usage. This serves as the fundamental model for how services are invoked and how they interact with other services.
    This paper, after providing some background on DFC, discusses a technique for visualizing the usages which arise through DFC specifications. With the visualization, users can monitor and validate service protocols and feature interactions in real time or through playback logs. The principal display component uses a novel variation of force-directed layouts for undirected graphs. The resulting graphical interface has become a principal tool for developers building services using DFC.