Stacked display: Difference between revisions
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{{Definition|'''Stacked displays''' are tailored to present data partitioned in a hierarchical structure. The basic idea is to embed one coordinate systems inside an other coordinate system. [Keim, 2002]}} | |||
{{Definition|'''Stacked displays''' are tailored to present data partitioned in a hierarchical structure.}} | |||
{{Quotation|In case of multidimensional data, the data dimensions to be used for partitioning the data and building the hierarchy have to be selected appropriately. An example of a stacked display technique is Dimensional Stacking. […] Other examples of stacked display techniques include Worlds-within-Worlds, Treemap, and Cone Trees.|[Keim, 2002]}} | |||
== References == | |||
*[Keim, 2002]: Daniel A. Keim, [http://fusion.cs.uni-magdeburg.de/pubs/TVCG02.pdf Information Visualization and Visual Data Mining], ''IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics'', 7(1):100-107, 2002. | |||
[[Category: Glossary]] | [[Category: Glossary]] |
Latest revision as of 17:57, 13 October 2005
Stacked displays are tailored to present data partitioned in a hierarchical structure. The basic idea is to embed one coordinate systems inside an other coordinate system. [Keim, 2002]
In case of multidimensional data, the data dimensions to be used for partitioning the data and building the hierarchy have to be selected appropriately. An example of a stacked display technique is Dimensional Stacking. […] Other examples of stacked display techniques include Worlds-within-Worlds, Treemap, and Cone Trees.
[Keim, 2002]
References
- [Keim, 2002]: Daniel A. Keim, Information Visualization and Visual Data Mining, IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, 7(1):100-107, 2002.