2010-09-02: CFP: Special Issue on Information Visualization: State of the Field and New Research Directions: Difference between revisions
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This special issue is based on discussions that took place at the second [http://www.dagstuhl.de/10241 Dagstuhl Seminar on Information Visualization] held in June 2010. One goal of this symposium was to bring together theoreticians and practitioners with a special focus on the intersection of information visualization and human-computer interaction. To support discussions that related to the visualization of real world data, researchers from selected application areas, such as Bioinformatics or Software Engineering, also attended and contributed. During the seminar, working groups on different topics (display technologies, interaction, collaboration, text/document visualization, comparison, data wrangling, aesthetics, and analysis process) were formed. Working groups have been invited to submit an article building on their discussions. All articles submitted to the special issue will go through the same rigorous peer-review process of the journal. | This special issue is based on discussions that took place at the second [http://www.dagstuhl.de/10241 Dagstuhl Seminar on Information Visualization] held in June 2010. One goal of this symposium was to bring together theoreticians and practitioners with a special focus on the intersection of information visualization and human-computer interaction. To support discussions that related to the visualization of real world data, researchers from selected application areas, such as Bioinformatics or Software Engineering, also attended and contributed. During the seminar, working groups on different topics (display technologies, interaction, collaboration, text/document visualization, comparison, data wrangling, aesthetics, and analysis process) were formed. Working groups have been invited to submit an article building on their discussions. All articles submitted to the special issue will go through the same rigorous peer-review process of the journal. | ||
Amen to the pair of these lessons! An inisaritpon to any un-published among us, your readers, or anybody who's been hesitating to follow their star, whatever its trajectory! Thank you! | |||
Latest revision as of 12:35, 31 May 2012
CALL FOR PAPERS
Information Visualization: State of the Field and New Research Directions
A Special Issue of Information Visualization
Guest Editors: Kerren, Andreas, Plaisant, Catherine, and Stasko, John T.
We invite the community to submit new articles examining the challenges and successes when applying information visualization to real world problems. Articles that specifically explore the state of research in a sub-area of information visualization are particularly welcome. Papers may focus on existing technical areas (e.g., text analysis or support for the analysis process) or propose new directions of research (e.g., the challenges of dealing with dirty data before and during analysis). Papers that report on a particular new technique or its evaluation are not a main focus. Specific topics particularly of interest are
- The influence of display technologies on information visualization
- The importance of interaction and/or multimodality
- Collaboration within information visualization
- Visualization of text and documents
- Comparison in information visualization: models and challenges
- Data wrangling: transformation of data to enable analysis
- Analysis process
- Visual design and aesthetics
- Prior knowledge of users
- Information visualization for the masses
This special issue is based on discussions that took place at the second Dagstuhl Seminar on Information Visualization held in June 2010. One goal of this symposium was to bring together theoreticians and practitioners with a special focus on the intersection of information visualization and human-computer interaction. To support discussions that related to the visualization of real world data, researchers from selected application areas, such as Bioinformatics or Software Engineering, also attended and contributed. During the seminar, working groups on different topics (display technologies, interaction, collaboration, text/document visualization, comparison, data wrangling, aesthetics, and analysis process) were formed. Working groups have been invited to submit an article building on their discussions. All articles submitted to the special issue will go through the same rigorous peer-review process of the journal.
Amen to the pair of these lessons! An inisaritpon to any un-published among us, your readers, or anybody who's been hesitating to follow their star, whatever its trajectory! Thank you!