VizNet: Towards A Large-Scale Visualization Learning and Benchmarking Repository

May 12, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

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Authors Kevin Hu, Neil Gaikwad, Michiel Bakker, Madelon Hulsebos, Emanuel Zgraggen, CΓ©sar Hidalgo, Tim Kraska, Guoliang Li, Arvind Satyanarayan, Γ‡ağatay Demiralp arXiv ID 1905.04616 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.DB, cs.LG Citations 120 Venue International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Researchers currently rely on ad hoc datasets to train automated visualization tools and evaluate the effectiveness of visualization designs. These exemplars often lack the characteristics of real-world datasets, and their one-off nature makes it difficult to compare different techniques. In this paper, we present VizNet: a large-scale corpus of over 31 million datasets compiled from open data repositories and online visualization galleries. On average, these datasets comprise 17 records over 3 dimensions and across the corpus, we find 51% of the dimensions record categorical data, 44% quantitative, and only 5% temporal. VizNet provides the necessary common baseline for comparing visualization design techniques, and developing benchmark models and algorithms for automating visual analysis. To demonstrate VizNet's utility as a platform for conducting online crowdsourced experiments at scale, we replicate a prior study assessing the influence of user task and data distribution on visual encoding effectiveness, and extend it by considering an additional task: outlier detection. To contend with running such studies at scale, we demonstrate how a metric of perceptual effectiveness can be learned from experimental results, and show its predictive power across test datasets.
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