Designing the user interface (2nd ed.): strategies for effective human-computer interaction
Designing the user interface (2nd ed.): strategies for effective human-computer interaction
Usability Engineering
User-Centered Design and Evaluation of Virtual Environments
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications
INFOVIS '01 Proceedings of the IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization 2001 (INFOVIS'01)
Information Visualization - Special issue on coordinated and multiple views in exploratory visualization
The challenge of information visualization evaluation
Proceedings of the working conference on Advanced visual interfaces
An Evaluation of Microarray Visualization Tools for Biological Insight
INFOVIS '04 Proceedings of the IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization
Project highlight: quality graphics for statistical summaries
dg.o '05 Proceedings of the 2005 national conference on Digital government research
Usability studies of geovisualization software in the workplace
dg.o '02 Proceedings of the 2002 annual national conference on Digital government research
dg.o '03 Proceedings of the 2003 annual national conference on Digital government research
Empirical comparison of dynamic query sliders and brushing histograms
INFOVIS'03 Proceedings of the Ninth annual IEEE conference on Information visualization
Visualization of large-scale customer satisfaction surveys using a parallel coordinate tree
INFOVIS'03 Proceedings of the Ninth annual IEEE conference on Information visualization
The Design of Everyday Things
Analytical, visual and interactive concepts for geo-visual analytics
Journal of Visual Languages and Computing
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This paper presents a design framework for geographic visualization based on iterative evaluations of a toolkit designed to support cancer epidemiology. The Exploratory Spatio-Temporal Analysis Toolkit (ESTAT), is intended to support visual exploration through multivariate health data. Its purpose is to provide epidemiologists with the ability to generate new hypotheses or further refine those they may already have. Through an iterative user-centered design process, ESTAT has been evaluated by epidemiologists at the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Results of these evaluations are discussed, and a design framework based on evaluation evidence is presented. The framework provides specific recommendations and considerations for the design and development of a geovisualization toolkit for epidemiology. Its basic structure provides a model for future design and evaluation efforts in information visualization.