Graph drawing by force-directed placement
Software—Practice & Experience
Visualizing the evolution of Web ecologies
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The anatomy of a large-scale hypertextual Web search engine
WWW7 Proceedings of the seventh international conference on World Wide Web 7
The connectivity server: fast access to linkage information on the Web
WWW7 Proceedings of the seventh international conference on World Wide Web 7
Finding related pages in the World Wide Web
WWW '99 Proceedings of the eighth international conference on World Wide Web
Authoritative sources in a hyperlinked environment
Proceedings of the ninth annual ACM-SIAM symposium on Discrete algorithms
Visualizing the evolution of a subject domain: a case study
VIS '99 Proceedings of the conference on Visualization '99: celebrating ten years
The stochastic approach for link-structure analysis (SALSA) and the TKC effect
Proceedings of the 9th international World Wide Web conference on Computer networks : the international journal of computer and telecommunications netowrking
Efficient identification of Web communities
Proceedings of the sixth ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining
Creating a Web community chart for navigating related communities
Proceedings of the 12th ACM conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia
GD '02 Revised Papers from the 10th International Symposium on Graph Drawing
A system for graph-based visualization of the evolution of software
Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Software visualization
Sensemaking of Evolving Web Sites Using Visualization Spreadsheets
INFOVIS '99 Proceedings of the 1999 IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization
Extracting evolution of web communities from a series of web archives
Proceedings of the fourteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Visualizing evolving networks: minimum spanning trees versus pathfinder networks
INFOVIS'03 Proceedings of the Ninth annual IEEE conference on Information visualization
Preserving the mental map using foresighted layout
EGVISSYM'01 Proceedings of the 3rd Joint Eurographics - IEEE TCVG conference on Visualization
Journey to the past: proposal of a framework for past web browser
Proceedings of the seventeenth conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
NeL2: network drawing tool for handling layered structured network diagram
APVis '06 Proceedings of the 2006 Asia-Pacific Symposium on Information Visualisation - Volume 60
Query based optimal web site clustering using simulated annealing
Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Information Integration and Web-based Applications & Services
Socio-sense: a system for analysing the societal behavior from long term web archive
APWeb'08 Proceedings of the 10th Asia-Pacific web conference on Progress in WWW research and development
Modeling parametric web arc weight measurement
ICCSA'07 Proceedings of the 2007 international conference on Computational science and its applications - Volume Part III
Visualization of relationships among historical persons using locational information
W2GIS'11 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Web and wireless geographical information systems
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We propose WebRelievo, a system for visualizing and analyzing the evolution of the web structure based on a large Web archive with a series of snapshots. It visualizes the evolution with a time series of graphs, in which nodes are web pages, and edges are relationships between pages. Graphs can be clustered to show the overview of changes in graphs. WebRelievo aligns these graphs according to their time, and automatically determines their layout keeping positions of nodes synchronized over time, so that the user can keep track pages and clusters. This visualization enables us to understand when pages appeared, how their relationships have evolved, and how clusters are merged and split over time. Current implementation of WebRelievo is based on six Japanese web archives crawled from 1999 to 2003. The user can interactively browse those graphs by changing the focused page and by changing layouts of graphs. Using WebRelievo we can answer historical questions, and to investigate changes in trends on the Web. We show the feasibility of WebRelievo by applying it to tracking trends in P2P systems and search engines for mobile phones, and to investigating link spamming.