Ph.D
Group :
Physical and Tangible Information Visualization
Starts on 01/12/2010
Advisor : FEKETE, Jean-Daniel
Funding :
Affiliation : Université Paris-Saclay
Laboratory : LRI INRIA Saclay
Defended on 10/03/2014, committee :
Encadrants :
Jean-Daniel Fekete, Inria
Pierre Dragicevic, Inria
Rapporteurs :
Jason Dykes, City University London
Kasper Hornbæk, University of Copenhagen
Examinateurs :
Michel Beaudouin-Lafon, Université Paris-Sud
Sheelagh Carpendale, University of Calgary
Research activities :
Abstract :
Computers immensely increased the amount of data we can collect and process as well as diversified the ways we can represent it visually. Computer-supported visualization systems, studied in the field of information visualization (infovis), have become powerful and complex, and sophisticated interaction techniques are now necessary to control them. With the widening of technological possibilities beyond classic desktop settings, new opportunities have emerged. Not only display surfaces of arbitrary shapes and sizes can be used to show richer visualizations, but also new input technologies can be used to manipulate them. For example, tangible user interfaces are an emerging input technology that capitalizes on humans' abilities to manipulate physical objects. However, these technologies have been barely studied in the field of information visualization.
In this thesis, I establish embodiment as a design principle for infovis purposes, I demonstrate and validate the efficiency and usability of both embodied visualization controls and embodied visualization displays through three controlled user experiments. I then present a conceptual interaction model and visual notation system that facilitates the description, comparison and criticism of various types of visualization systems and illustrate it through case studies of currently existing point solutions. Finally, to aid the creation of physical visualizations, I present a software tool that supports users in building their own visualizations. The tool is suitable for users new to both visualization and digital fabrication, and can help to increase users' awareness of and interest in data in their everyday live. In summary, this thesis contributes to the understanding of the value of emerging physical representations for information visualization.