4.5 Article

Image-guided color mapping for categorical data visualization

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL VISUAL MEDIA
Volume 8, Issue 4, Pages 613-629

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s41095-021-0258-0

Keywords

color palette; discriminability; image-guided; categorical data visualization

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [U2001206, 61872250]
  2. GD Talent Program [2019JC05X328]
  3. GD Natural Science Foundation [2020A0505100064, 2021B1515020085]
  4. Shenzhen Science and Technology Key Program [RCJC20200714114435012, JCYJ20210324120213036]
  5. DEGP Key Project [2018KZDXM058]

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This paper proposes an effective method to automatically generate coloring for categorical data visualization, which resembles a reference image while allowing classes to be easily distinguished. The method extracts dominant and discriminable colors from the reference image's color space and optimizes point distinctness and color spatial relations to assign colors to the given classes.
Appropriate color mapping for categorical data visualization can significantly facilitate the discovery of underlying data patterns and effectively bring out visual aesthetics. Some systems suggest predefined palettes for this task. However, a predefined color mapping is not always optimal, failing to consider users' needs for customization. Given an input categorical data visualization and a reference image, we present an effective method to automatically generate a coloring that resembles the reference while allowing classes to be easily distinguished. We extract a color palette with high perceptual distance between the colors by sampling dominant and discriminable colors from the image's color space. These colors are assigned to given classes by solving an integer quadratic program to optimize point distinctness of the given chart while preserving the color spatial relations in the source image. We show results on various coloring tasks, with a diverse set of new coloring appearances for the input data. We also compare our approach to state-of-the-art palettes in a controlled user study, which shows that our method achieves comparable performance in class discrimination, while being more similar to the source image. User feedback after using our system verifies its efficiency in automatically generating desirable colorings that meet the user's expectations when choosing a reference.

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