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CHI '91 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
UIST '94 Proceedings of the 7th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
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VIS '97 Proceedings of the 8th conference on Visualization '97
The visualization toolkit (2nd ed.): an object-oriented approach to 3D graphics
The visualization toolkit (2nd ed.): an object-oriented approach to 3D graphics
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GRIN'01 No description on Graphics interface 2001
Cognitive Effects of Animated Visualization in Exploratory Visual Data Analysis
IV '01 Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Information Visualisation
Visual Bracketing for Web search Result Visualization
IV '03 Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Information Visualization
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VIS '90 Proceedings of the 1st conference on Visualization '90
Tioga: a database-oriented visualization tool
VIS '93 Proceedings of the 4th conference on Visualization '93
GRASPARC: a problem solving environment integrating computation and visualization
VIS '93 Proceedings of the 4th conference on Visualization '93
VISA: visual subspace clustering analysis
ACM SIGKDD Explorations Newsletter - Special issue on visual analytics
CollisionExplorer: a tool for visualizing droplet collisions in a turbulent flow
ISVC'11 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Advances in visual computing - Volume Part II
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There are many tools that provide the user with an abundance of sliders, buttons and options to change; such tools are popular in exploratory visualization. As the user changes the parameters so the display dynamically updates and responds appropriately to changes made. These multiparameter systems can be difficult to use, as the user is often unaware of the outcome of any action before it occurs. Specifically it may be unclear whether to increase or decrease a parameter value to get a desired result. Multiple view systems can help, as the user can try out various scenarios and compare the results side-by-side, although if unrestricted the user may be swamped by numerous and often unnecessary views. In this paper we present the novel idea of 'bracketing', where a principal view is supported with two additional views from slightly different parameterizations. The idea is inspired by exposure bracketing in photography. This provides a middle ground: it offers a way to see adjacent-parameterizations, while allowing yet restraining multiple views. Moreover, we demonstrate how bracketing can be exploited in many applications and used in various ways (within parameter, visual and temporal domains).