4.7 Article

ChartSeer: Interactive Steering Exploratory Visual Analysis With Machine Intelligence

Journal

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TVCG.2020.3018724

Keywords

Visualization; Data visualization; Machine learning; Encoding; Task analysis; Semantics; Collaboration; Exploratory visual analysis; interactive steering; visualization recommendation; machine learning

Funding

  1. NSERC Discovery Grant
  2. Adobe Systems, Inc.

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This study proposes a system called ChartSeer that uses machine intelligence to assist analysts in monitoring the current state of exploratory visual analysis (EVA) and identifying future activities. By utilizing deep learning techniques to characterize data charts, generate visual summaries, and recommend appropriate charts, ChartSeer enables analysts to enhance their analysis and explore data variables more effectively.
During exploratory visual analysis (EVA), analysts need to continually determine which subsequent activities to perform, such as which data variables to explore or how to present data variables visually. Due to the vast combinations of data variables and visual encodings that are possible, it is often challenging to make such decisions. Further, while performing local explorations, analysts often fail to attend to the holistic picture that is emerging from their analysis, leading them to improperly steer their EVA. These issues become even more impactful in the real world analysis scenarios where EVA occurs in multiple asynchronous sessions that could be completed by one or more analysts. To address these challenges, this work proposes ChartSeer, a system that uses machine intelligence to enable analysts to visually monitor the current state of an EVA and effectively identify future activities to perform. ChartSeer utilizes deep learning techniques to characterize analyst-created data charts to generate visual summaries and recommend appropriate charts for further exploration based on user interactions. A case study was first conducted to demonstrate the usage of ChartSeer in practice, followed by a controlled study to compare ChartSeer's performance with a baseline during EVA tasks. The results demonstrated that ChartSeer enables analysts to adequately understand current EVA status and advance their analysis by creating charts with increased coverage and visual encoding diversity.

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