Computer Graphics

University of California - Berkeley

Graphical Histories for Visualization: Supporting Analysis, Communication, and Evaluation


Abstract

Interactive history tools, ranging from basic undo and redo to branching timelines of user actions, facilitate iterative forms of interaction. In this paper, we investigate the design of history mechanisms for information visualization. We present a design space analysis of both architectural and interface issues, identifying design decisions and associated trade-offs. Based on this analysis, we contribute a design study of graphical history tools for Tableau, a database visualization system. These tools record and visualize interaction histories, support data analysis and communication of findings, and contribute novel mechanisms for presenting, managing, and exporting histories. Furthermore, we have analyzed aggregated collections of history sessions to evaluate Tableau usage. We describe additional tools for analyzing users’ history logs and how they have been applied to study usage patterns in Tableau.

Citation

Jeffrey Heer, Jock D. Mackinlay, Chris Stolte, and Maneesh Agrawala. "Graphical Histories for Visualization: Supporting Analysis, Communication, and Evaluation". IEEE Information Visualization (InfoVis) 2008, 2008.

Supplemental Material

For further details, please see the project page hosted on the Visualization Lab website at http://vis.berkeley.edu/papers/graphical_histories/.