CHI '86 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The visual display of quantitative information
The visual display of quantitative information
Modeling the Cognitive content of displays
Human Factors
Coping with human errors through system design: implications for ecological interface design
International Journal of Man-Machine Studies
Designing the user interface (2nd ed.): strategies for effective human-computer interaction
Designing the user interface (2nd ed.): strategies for effective human-computer interaction
Graphical displays: implications for divided attention, focused attention, and problem solving
Human Factors - Special issue: visual displays
Fractal views: a fractal-based method for controlling information display
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
High-speed visual estimation using preattentive processing
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI)
Visualizing the non-visual: spatial analysis and interaction with information for text documents
Readings in information visualization
Information design considerations for improving situation awareness in complex problem-solving
SIGDOC '99 Proceedings of the 17th annual international conference on Computer documentation
Temporal Thumbnails: rapid visualization of time-based viewing data
Proceedings of the working conference on Advanced visual interfaces
Software unit profiles & Kiviat figures
ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review
Kiviat graphs: conventions and "figures of merit"
ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review
A User-centered Look at Glyph-based Security Visualization
VIZSEC '05 Proceedings of the IEEE Workshops on Visualization for Computer Security
Automated criminal link analysis based on domain knowledge: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Note-taking for self-explanation and problem solving
Human-Computer Interaction
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Visual displays of information (such as dashboards) have become very sophisticated in rendering world semantics but neglect display semantics, leading to what is commonly called information overload. Underlying storage and retrieval research has been utilizing semantic and cognitive theory to drive the current implementations of ontology markup using the resource description framework (RDF) and Web ontology language (OWL) for over a decade. Yet despite these semantically rich underlying description logics, and despite the very large and mature stream of cognitive and neuroscience theory literature on visual perception and attention, memory, and linguistics, this is one aspect within the area of information visualization and human factors research where empirically tested semantic theory has not yet caught up, and begs for theory-driven research into display semantics using what might be termed ''graphical linguistics.'' We conducted an experiment to assess the cognitive effort of interpreting domain general knowledge using the same information represented in three forms, and found that graphical linguistics reduce cognitive effort for a specific type of task involving high-density time-sensitive information typically found in situation control rooms.