Perspective Wall: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 13:26, 1 May 2013
Authors
Short description
Tasks that involve large information spaces overwhelm workspaces that do not support efficient use of space and time. For example, case studies indicate that information often contains linear components, which can result in 2D layouts with wide, inefficient aspect ratios. The paper describes a technique called the Perspective Wall for visualizing linear information by smoothly integrating detailed and contextual views. The Perspective Wall technique takes advantage of hardware support for 3D interactive animation to imitate the architecture of the eye system. It folds a 2D layout into a 3D wall that smoothly integrates a region for viewing details with perspective regions for viewing context. This intuitive distortion of the layout provides efficient space utilization and allows smooth transitions of views. Analysis of the Perspective Wall technique indicates a threefold improvement over simple 2D visualizations.The resulting visualization supports efficient use of space and time.
[George Robertson et al., 1991]
Figures
External Links
- [paper relating the perspective wall of Robertson et al.]
- [short presentation of perspective walls]
- [examples]
References
- [Robertson et al., 1991] George Robertson, Jock D. Mackinlay, Stuart Card. The Perspective Wall: Detail And Context Smoothly Integrated. In Proceedings of CHI '91 Conference, pages 173--179, April 28 - June 5, 1991, New Orleans, Louisiana, June 1991. Association for Computing Machinery.