VisGap2022 - The Gap between Visualization Research and Visualization Software

Permanent URI for this collection

Domain Considerations
Visualization Ecology Applications for Measurement Science: A Visualization Gap Approach
Simon Su, William Sherman, Steve Satterfield, Terence Griffin, Sandy Ressler, William George, Shaw Feng, and Judith Terrill
Physical Traces and Digital Stories: Exploring the Connections Between Forensics and Visualization
Victor Schetinger and Saminu Salisu
Reflections
Personal Experiences of Providing and Using Research Prototypes
Tobias Isenberg

BibTeX (VisGap2022 - The Gap between Visualization Research and Visualization Software)
@inproceedings{
10.2312:visgap.20222006,
booktitle = {
VisGap - The Gap between Visualization Research and Visualization Software},
editor = {
Gillmann, Christina
 and
Krone, Michael
 and
Reina, Guido
 and
Wischgoll, Thomas
}, title = {{
VisGap 2022: Frontmatter}},
author = {
Gillmann, Christina
 and
Krone, Michael
 and
Reina, Guido
 and
Wischgoll, Thomas
}, year = {
2022},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-03868-181-6},
DOI = {
10.2312/visgap.20222006}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:visgap.20221057,
booktitle = {
VisGap - The Gap between Visualization Research and Visualization Software},
editor = {
Gillmann, Christina
 and
Krone, Michael
 and
Reina, Guido
 and
Wischgoll, Thomas
}, title = {{
Visualization Ecology Applications for Measurement Science: A Visualization Gap Approach}},
author = {
Su, Simon
 and
Sherman, William
 and
Satterfield, Steve
 and
Griffin, Terence
 and
Ressler, Sandy
 and
George, William
 and
Feng, Shaw
 and
Terrill, Judith
}, year = {
2022},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-03868-181-6},
DOI = {
10.2312/visgap.20221057}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:visgap.20221058,
booktitle = {
VisGap - The Gap between Visualization Research and Visualization Software},
editor = {
Gillmann, Christina
 and
Krone, Michael
 and
Reina, Guido
 and
Wischgoll, Thomas
}, title = {{
Physical Traces and Digital Stories: Exploring the Connections Between Forensics and Visualization}},
author = {
Schetinger, Victor
 and
Salisu, Saminu
}, year = {
2022},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-03868-181-6},
DOI = {
10.2312/visgap.20221058}
}
@inproceedings{
10.2312:visgap.20221059,
booktitle = {
VisGap - The Gap between Visualization Research and Visualization Software},
editor = {
Gillmann, Christina
 and
Krone, Michael
 and
Reina, Guido
 and
Wischgoll, Thomas
}, title = {{
Personal Experiences of Providing and Using Research Prototypes}},
author = {
Isenberg, Tobias
}, year = {
2022},
publisher = {
The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-03868-181-6},
DOI = {
10.2312/visgap.20221059}
}

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Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
  • Item
    VisGap 2022: Frontmatter
    (The Eurographics Association, 2022) Gillmann, Christina; Krone, Michael; Reina, Guido; Wischgoll, Thomas; Gillmann, Christina; Krone, Michael; Reina, Guido; Wischgoll, Thomas
  • Item
    Visualization Ecology Applications for Measurement Science: A Visualization Gap Approach
    (The Eurographics Association, 2022) Su, Simon; Sherman, William; Satterfield, Steve; Griffin, Terence; Ressler, Sandy; George, William; Feng, Shaw; Terrill, Judith; Gillmann, Christina; Krone, Michael; Reina, Guido; Wischgoll, Thomas
    Advanced visualization research have remained insufficiently included in science and engineering workflows due to the highly specialized task-specific requirements and lack of suitable applications. Although the field of visualization is maturing and researchers have invested efforts into introspection and methodologies, much of the research is not readily available to the scientists and engineers in their daily workflow. In our effort to address the visualization gap, we are working to adapt and extend an existing open-source visualization framework in our workflow to streamline our basic research into visualization application to address measurement uncertainty challenges. In addition to benefiting scientists in our organization, we also hope that our contributions to the open-source framework will benefit our customers, the broader scientific community and society.
  • Item
    Physical Traces and Digital Stories: Exploring the Connections Between Forensics and Visualization
    (The Eurographics Association, 2022) Schetinger, Victor; Salisu, Saminu; Gillmann, Christina; Krone, Michael; Reina, Guido; Wischgoll, Thomas
    Forensics, or forensic science, deals with the analysis of evidence for investigation. It is a a wide and strongly interdisciplinary field that needs the coupling of research, practice, and communication to be useful. New techniques have to be constantly developed and applied in the field to solve social conflicts. Recent work suggests, however, that there are many gaps in this coupling, and we argue that there are lessons to be learned from them. Among the difficulties faced by forensics are the management of its interdisciplinarity and over-specialization, and the effective adoption of new research, which are also pressing for the visualization community. In this paper, we bring a gentle introduction to the challenges of forensics with a focus on its digital forms and explore connections to visualization. We believe these connections can be leveraged to further the development of both fields, and particularly that visualization and interaction are critical for the forensics process.
  • Item
    Personal Experiences of Providing and Using Research Prototypes
    (The Eurographics Association, 2022) Isenberg, Tobias; Gillmann, Christina; Krone, Michael; Reina, Guido; Wischgoll, Thomas
    I report on my personal experiences as a student, researcher, supervisor, and collaborator about providing and using research prototype software (i. e., demos). Based on an analysis of my own research activities in computer graphics and visualization, I discuss problems of providing demo software for our own projects, problems of running such software years after the release, and problems of accessing such prototypes after several years. I conclude that both source code and demos should be encouraged, provide some recommendations on how to do the latter, and call for a more active support of sharing this part of a scientific contribution within the Open Science movement.