Computer Graphics & Visual Computing (CGVC) 2015

Permanent URI for this collection

University College London, United Kingdom, 16 – 17 September 2015
Visualisation and Analytics
Multivariate Hybrid Visualisation of Ornithological Sensor Data
Richard C. Roberts, Robert S. Laramee, and Mark W. Jones
Explaining Neighborhood Preservation for Multidimensional Projections
Rafael Messias Martins, Rosane Minghim, and Alexandru C. Telea
Quasi-Hamming Distances: An Overarching Concept for Measuring Glyph Similarity
Philip A. Legg, Eamonn Maguire, Simon Walton, and Min Chen
Revealing Cultural Collections Over Time
Florian Kräutli and Stephen Boyd Davis
Recent Work on Cell Lineage Visualisation
A. J. Pretorius
Computer Graphics Applications: From 2D to Simulation
GKS-94 to SVG: Some Reflections on the Evolution of Standards for 2D Graphics
David A. Duce and F.R.A. Hopgood
Tiled Projection Onto Deforming Screens
Hyosun Kim, Christoph Schinko, Sven Havemann, Ivan Redi, Andrea Redi, and Dieter W. Fellner
Space Carving Voxel Models for Urban Aerial Laser Scan Data
Oliver Skidmore, Hamish Carr, and Debra Laefer
Visualising Real Time Large Scale Micro-Simulation of Transport Networks
Peter Heywood, Paul Richmond, and Steve Maddock
QCDVis: a tool for the visualization of Lattice Quantum Chromodynamics data
Dean P. Thomas, Rita Borgo, and Simon Hands
Visualisation Techniques
Visibility-Weighted Saliency for Volume Visualization
Shengzhou Luo and John Dingliana
Fiber Surfaces: Generalizing Isosurfaces to Bivariate Data
Hamish Carr, Geng Zhao, Julien Tierny, Amit Chattopadhyay, and Aaron Knoll
Multi-Perspective Synopsis with Faceted Views of Varying Emphasis
Chris Rooney, Roger Beecham, Jason Dykes, Cagatay Turkay, Aidan Slingsby, Jo Wood, and William Wong
Natural Phenomena as Metaphors for Visualization of Trend Data in Interactive Software Maps
Hannes Würfel, Matthias Trapp, Daniel Limberger, and Jürgen Döllner
Interaction Techniques and Applications
Extending the Scaffold Hunter Visualization Toolkit with Interactive Heatmaps
Werner Sturm, Till Schäfer, Tobias Schreck, Andreas Holzinger, and Torsten Ullrich
Some Thoughts on Visual Analytics in Teaching
David A. Duce
Using Sketching to Control Heterogeneous Groups
Thomas Allen, Aleksandar Parvanov, Sam Knight, and Steve Maddock
User-defined Gestures for Augmented Reality with Smart Phones
Francesca Madeddu, Daniel Archambault, Rita Borgo, and Lewis Hancock

BibTeX (Computer Graphics & Visual Computing (CGVC) 2015)
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20152019,
booktitle = {
Table of Contents and Preface},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Frontmatter: Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)}},
author = {
Borgo, Rita
 and
Turkay, Cagatay
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20152019}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151233,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Multivariate Hybrid Visualisation of Ornithological Sensor Data}},
author = {
Roberts, Richard C.
 and
Laramee, Robert S.
 and
Jones, Mark W.
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151233}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151238,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
GKS-94 to SVG: Some Reflections on the Evolution of Standards for 2D Graphics}},
author = {
Duce, David A.
 and
Hopgood, F.R.A.
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151238}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151234,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Explaining Neighborhood Preservation for Multidimensional Projections}},
author = {
Martins, Rafael Messias
 and
Minghim, Rosane
 and
Telea, Alexandru C.
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151234}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151239,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Tiled Projection Onto Deforming Screens}},
author = {
Kim, Hyosun
 and
Schinko, Christoph
 and
Havemann, Sven
 and
Redi, Ivan
 and
Redi, Andrea
 and
Fellner, Dieter W.
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151239}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151243,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Visibility-Weighted Saliency for Volume Visualization}},
author = {
Luo, Shengzhou
 and
Dingliana, John
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151243}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151247,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Extending the Scaffold Hunter Visualization Toolkit with Interactive Heatmaps}},
author = {
Sturm, Werner
 and
Schäfer, Till
 and
Schreck, Tobias
 and
Holzinger, Andreas
 and
Ullrich, Torsten
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151247}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151246,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Natural Phenomena as Metaphors for Visualization of Trend Data in Interactive Software Maps}},
author = {
Würfel, Hannes
 and
Trapp, Matthias
 and
Limberger, Daniel
 and
Döllner, Jürgen
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151246}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:cgvc.20151249,
booktitle = {
Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)},
editor = {
Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
}, title = {{
Using Sketching to Control Heterogeneous Groups}},
author = {
Allen, Thomas
 and
Parvanov, Aleksandar
 and
Knight, Sam
 and
Maddock, Steve
}, year = {
2015},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-94-1},
DOI = {
10.2312/cgvc.20151249}
}

Browse

Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 9 of 9
  • Item
    Frontmatter: Computer Graphics and Visual Computing (CGVC)
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Borgo, Rita; Turkay, Cagatay; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
  • Item
    Multivariate Hybrid Visualisation of Ornithological Sensor Data
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Roberts, Richard C.; Laramee, Robert S.; Jones, Mark W.; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    To overcome the challenges of displaying multivariate sensor data, we propose a novel work-in-progress, hybrid, polar method of visualisation. Sensor data is collected by marine biologists in high volumes and using multiple sensors. Challenges arise when trying to unlock the marine wildlife behaviour from the vast amount of time series data collected. The proposed method filters uninteresting behaviour and isolates the features of interest within the set. Multi-layer polar plots are used to visualise local pressure, temperature, temporal behaviour and energy expenditure, all of which are given upper and lower plotting ranges to ensure no overlap. This results in a feature centred visualisation that focuses on the most important behaviour. The value in this method is that the visualisation can show many instances of the chosen activity. Each animal can be examined individually, or multiple animals and behaviours can be compared side-by-side for the first time. An interactive software system enables the user to navigate such that individual instances of the marine wildlife behaviour can be studied at high resolution or the user may choose an overview of every animal. This paper uses ornithological sensor data to demonstrate the proposed visualisation. Although it can be applied to other multivariate data sets that are linked with a temporal dimension.
  • Item
    GKS-94 to SVG: Some Reflections on the Evolution of Standards for 2D Graphics
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Duce, David A.; Hopgood, F.R.A.; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    Activities to define international standards for computer graphics, in particular through ISO/IEC, started in the 1970s. The advent of the World Wide Web has brought new requirements and opportunities for standardization and now a variety of bodies including ISO/IEC and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) promulgate standards in this space. This paper takes a historical look at one of the early ISO/IEC standards for 2D graphics, the Graphical Kernel System (GKS) and compares key concepts and approaches in this standard (as revised in 1994) with concepts and approaches in the W3C Recommendation for Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG). The paper reflects on successes as well as lost opportunities.
  • Item
    Explaining Neighborhood Preservation for Multidimensional Projections
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Martins, Rafael Messias; Minghim, Rosane; Telea, Alexandru C.; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    Dimensionality reduction techniques are the tools of choice for exploring high-dimensional datasets by means of low-dimensional projections. However, even state-of-the-art projection methods fail, up to various degrees, in perfectly preserving the structure of the data, expressed in terms of inter-point distances and point neighborhoods. To support better interpretation of a projection, we propose several metrics for quantifying errors related to neighborhood preservation. Next, we propose a number of visualizations that allow users to explore and explain the quality of neighborhood preservation at different scales, captured by the aforementioned error metrics.We demonstrate our exploratory views on three real-world datasets and two state-of-the-art multidimensional projection techniques.
  • Item
    Tiled Projection Onto Deforming Screens
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Kim, Hyosun; Schinko, Christoph; Havemann, Sven; Redi, Ivan; Redi, Andrea; Fellner, Dieter W.; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    For the next generation of visual installations it will not be sufficient to surround the visitor by stunning responsive audiovisual experiences - the next step is that space itself deforms in response to the user or user groups. Dynamic reconfigurable spaces are a new exciting possibility to influence the behaviour of groups and individuals; they may have the potential of stimulating various different social interactions and behaviours in a user-adapted fashion. However, some technical hurdles must be overcome. Projecting on larger surfaces, like a ceiling screen of 6 8 meters, is typically possible only with a tiled projection, i.e., with multiple projectors creating one large seamless image. This works well with a static ceiling; however, when the ceiling dynamically moves and deforms, the tiling becomes visible since the images no longer match. In this paper we present a method that can avoid such artifacts by dynamically adjusting the tiled projection to the deforming surface. Our method is surprisingly simple and efficient, and it does not require any image processing at runtime, nor any 3D reconstruction of the surface at any point.
  • Item
    Visibility-Weighted Saliency for Volume Visualization
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Luo, Shengzhou; Dingliana, John; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    Volume visualization has been widely used to depict complicated 3D structures in volume data sets. However, obtaining clear visualization of the features of interest in a volume is still a major challenge. The clarity of features depends on the transfer function, the viewpoint and the spatial distribution of features in the volume data set. In this paper, we propose visibility-weighted saliency as a measure of visual saliency of features in volume rendered images, in order to assist users in choosing suitable viewpoints and designing effective transfer functions to visualize the features of interest. Visibility-weighted saliency is based on a computational measure of perceptual importance of voxels and the visibility of features in volume rendered images. The effectiveness of this scheme is demonstrated by test results on two volume data sets.
  • Item
    Extending the Scaffold Hunter Visualization Toolkit with Interactive Heatmaps
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Sturm, Werner; Schäfer, Till; Schreck, Tobias; Holzinger, Andreas; Ullrich, Torsten; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    In many application areas, large amounts of data arise, which are often hard to interpret or make use of by humans. Interactive visualization can help to overview and explore large amounts of data. An example is in the life sciences, where databases of chemical compounds need to be analyzed in terms of similarities of molecular properties. Scientists then need to explore this data in an efficient way. The Scaffold Hunter framework is an Open Source software system for interactive visualization of highdimensional data. In this paper, we present an extension of Scaffold Hunter with an interactive heatmap, which ties in tightly with a dendrogram visualization. We added specific interaction modalities and views tailored to the analysis of chemical compounds. Zooming capabilities allow to start from an overview of the data (showing all data elements at once) down to a detail-on-demand view which includes chemical structural views of molecules. We show how the interactive heatmap with clustered rows and columns can bring new insights into the data regarding various properties. The implementation is made available for researchers and practitioners to use.
  • Item
    Natural Phenomena as Metaphors for Visualization of Trend Data in Interactive Software Maps
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Würfel, Hannes; Trapp, Matthias; Limberger, Daniel; Döllner, Jürgen; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    Software maps are a commonly used tool for code quality monitoring in software-development projects and decision making processes. While providing an important visualization technique for the hierarchical system structure of a single software revision, they lack capabilities with respect to the visualization of changes over multiple revisions. This paper presents a novel technique for visualizing the evolution of the software system structure based on software metric trends. These trend maps extend software maps by using real-time rendering techniques for natural phenomena yielding additional visual variables that can be effectively used for the communication of changes. Therefore, trend data is automatically computed by hierarchically aggregating software metrics. We demonstrate and discuss the presented technique using two real world data sets of complex software systems.
  • Item
    Using Sketching to Control Heterogeneous Groups
    (The Eurographics Association, 2015) Allen, Thomas; Parvanov, Aleksandar; Knight, Sam; Maddock, Steve; Rita Borgo and Cagatay Turkay
    The basic methods of interaction in strategy games with regards to controlling groups of units has largely remained the same since the first strategy games were released. Although the control systems in games today are effective and intuitive, they are somewhat limiting for the user in terms of achieving more complex goals. Recently, there has been research into using sketch-based systems as an alternate means of controlling a crowd, granting a higher level of control to the user while maintaining an easy to use and intuitive interface. So far, however, this has only been implemented for homogeneous groups. This paper describes the implementation of a sketch-based crowd control system for strategy games, which allows the user to exert a greater level of control over their armies by giving them the ability to control heterogeneous groups by using sub-group sketching to distinguish formations and paths for groups and sub-groups to adhere to.