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Visual Analytics and the Geometry Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography, GeoVISTA Center & e-Dutton Institute for Education Penn State

Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

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Page 1: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought—Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought—Spatial Intelligence through Sapient InterfacesSpatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces

Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty

Department of Geography, GeoVISTA Center&

e-Dutton Institute for EducationPenn State

Page 2: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Star PlotsStar PlotsHow Shape Characteristics InfluenceHow Shape Characteristics Influence

Classification TasksClassification Tasks

Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty

Department of Geography, GeoVISTA Center&

e-Dutton Institute for EducationPenn State

Page 3: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Overview

Multivariate data displays Experiment on the influence of shape

(of star plots) on the classification of data Design of a tool to administer grouping

experiments Design of a tool to analyze individual similarity

ratings Does shape matter? Conclusion and future work

Page 4: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Displaying Multivariate Data

We encounter limitations in displaying multivariate data in two dimensions

As a response to these constraints several graphic designs have been advised, for example Andrews curves Parallel plots Chernoff faces Star plots Etc etc.

The big question is Which visualization technique does “work” for which data

sets and which does not

Page 5: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Parallel Coordinate Plot

Page 6: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Chernoff Faces

Source: http://mapmaker.rutgers.edu/355/links.html

Page 7: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

www.ncgia.ucsb.edu

Page 8: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

www.ghastlyfop.com

Page 9: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Star Plots

Page 10: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Star Plots

Page 11: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Star Plots

GeoViz Toolkit: http://www.geovista.psu.edu/grants/cdcesda/software/

Page 12: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Question

In their work on Chernoff faces Chernoff and Rizvi (1975) found that varying the assignment of variables to facial characteristics has an influence on classification tasks

Question For star plots the assumption is made that the

assignment of variables to rays does not matter, but is that really the case?

Page 13: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Experiment: Car Data

Price

Safety rating (h igher is better)

MPGMiles per Gallon

Emissions

Weight

Maximum speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1-3-5-7

Price

Safety rating (higher is better)

M PGM iles per Gallon

Emissions

W eight

M axim um speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

2-3-6-7

20 participants in each conditionPenn State undergraduates

Page 14: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

30-15

65-50

100-85

100-85

Page 15: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

The Grouping Tool

81 icons(4 variables, 3 levels(high, medium, low))

1-3-5-7

Page 16: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

The Grouping Tool

81 icons(4 variables, 3 levels(high, medium, low))

2-3-6-7

Page 17: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Example: All Low Values

=

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 18: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Data

Number of groups Time to complete Similarity matrix Linguistic labels

Page 19: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Some Results

There is no statistically significant difference in the number of groups created in 1-3-5-7 and 2-3-6-7 (t = .241, df = 38, p = .811)

There is no statistical significant difference in the time participants needed to complete the task (t = -1.533, df = 38, p = .134)

The similarity values in both similarity matrices are correlated and the correlation is statistically significant (r = .581, N = 3240, p < .0005)

Page 20: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Cluster Analysis

Ward’s method

1-3-5-7

2-3-6-7

Page 21: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

MDS Plots

1-3-5-7

Page 22: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

MDS Plots

2-3-6-7

Page 23: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Grouping Analysis

Improvise by Chris Weaver (http://www.personal.psu.edu/cew15/improvise/index.html)

2-3-6-71-3-5-7

Page 24: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Price

Safety rating (h igher is better)

MPGMiles per Gallon

Emissions

Weight

Maximum speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8Price

Safety rating (higher is better)

M PGM iles per Gallon

Emissions

W eight

M axim um speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 25: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 26: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Price

Safety rating (h igher is better)

MPGMiles per Gallon

Emissions

Weight

Maximum speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8Price

Safety rating (higher is better)

M PGM iles per Gallon

Emissions

W eight

M axim um speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 27: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 28: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Price

Safety rating (h igher is better)

MPGMiles per Gallon

Emissions

Weight

Maximum speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8Price

Safety rating (higher is better)

M PGM iles per Gallon

Emissions

W eight

M axim um speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 29: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 30: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Price

Safety rating (h igher is better)

MPGMiles per Gallon

Emissions

Weight

Maximum speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8Price

Safety rating (higher is better)

M PGM iles per Gallon

Emissions

W eight

M axim um speed

Interior space

Acceleration(higher is faster)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 31: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

1-3-5-7 2-3-6-7

Page 32: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Conclusion

Shape does matter The assignment of variable to rays in a star plot influences

classification tasks (compare Chernoff faces) Characteristic shape features have an influence on rating

the similarity of the represented data The more characteristic the shape, the greater the influence

It may therefore be that star plots are less suitable for lay person exploratory analysis but more effective in communication (if carefully chosen).

Page 33: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Outlook

Quantifying data analysis Cluster validation methods

E.g., Rand statistic, Jaccard coefficient Individual analysis of “shape families”

Relation to linguistic labels Continue work on how should variables be assigned to

rays For example, is there a time advantage for salient shapes?

Influence of contextual parameters Of a star plot as such (e.g. number of variables/rays) As a symbol in a map (e.g. spatial patterns, and first law or

geography). Star plots in comparison to other visualization

techniques

Page 34: Visual Analytics and the Geometry of Thought— Spatial Intelligence through Sapient Interfaces Alexander Klippel & Frank Hardisty Department of Geography,

Thank you