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CS 7450 Information Visualization
Spring 2004, TuTh 1:30-3:00
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General InformationInformation visualization is a new research area that focuses on the use of visualization techniques to help people understand and analyze data. While fields such as scientific visualization involve the presention of data that has some physical or geometric correspondence, information visualization focuses on abstract data without such correspondences such as symbolic, tabular, networked, hierarchical, or textual information sources.The objectives of the course are
The course will follow a graduate seminar style with much discussion of assigned readings, as well as viewing of videos and hands-on experience with research and commercial information visualization tools. Text: Our primary text will be Information Visualization by Robert Spence, ACM Press, 2000. We also will use Envisioning Information by Edward Tufte, Graphics Press, 1990. Readings from the textbooks will be supplemented by selected other articles that will be distributed in class. Additional books that will be useful are Readings in Information Visualization, Using Visualization to Think by Stuart Card, Jock Mackinlay and Ben Shneiderman, Morgan Kaufmann, 1999 (a collection of seminal papers in the field supplemented by additional descriptive material) and The Visual Display of Quantitative Information by Edward Tufte, Graphics Press, 1983. Grading will be based on short homeworks, assignments involving use and analysis of some information visualization tools, a semester project, and a final exam. The weight of each assignment can be found on the assignments page. Students from a variety of disciplines are invited to take the course, but some prior background in human-computer interaction will be helpful. Programming experience is not required but will be useful. Project ideas not involving serious programming will be available. |