2018-09-29: CFP: BigVis 2019 :: 2nd International Workshop on Big Data Visual Exploration and Analytics

From InfoVis:Wiki
Revision as of 12:29, 2 October 2018 by AArleo PhD (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

BigVis 2019 Call for Papers


BigVis 2019 :: 2nd International Workshop on Big Data Visual Exploration and Analytics

Home: https://bigvis.imsi.athenarc.gr/bigvis2019

Held in conjunction with the 22nd Intl. Conference on Extending Database Technology & 22nd Intl. Conference on Database Theory (EDBT/ICDT 2019), Lisbon, Portugal


In the Big Data era, the growing availability of a variety of massive datasets presents challenges and opportunities to not only corporate data analysts but also others, such as research scientists, data journalists, policy makers, SMEs, and individual data enthusiasts datasets are typically: accessible in a raw format that are not being loaded or indexed in a database (e.g., plain text, json, rdf), dynamic, dirty and heterogeneous in nature. The level of difficulty in transforming a data-curious user into someone who can access and analyze that data is even more burdensome now for a great number of users with little or no support and expertise on the data processing part. The purpose of visual data exploration is to facilitate information perception and manipulation, knowledge extraction and inference by non-expert users. Interactive visualization, used in a variety of modern systems, provides users with intuitive means to interpret and explore the content of the data, identify interesting patterns, infer correlations and causalities, and supports sense-making activities that are not always possible with traditional data analysis techniques.

In the Big Data era, several challenges arise in the field of data visualization and analytics. First, the modern exploration and visualization systems should offer scalable data management techniques in order to efficiently handle billion objects datasets, limiting the system response in a few milliseconds. Besides, nowadays systems must address the challenge of on-the-fly scalable visualizations over large and dynamic sets of volatile raw data, offering efficient interactive exploration techniques, as well as mechanisms for information abstraction, sampling and summarization for addressing problems related to visual information overplotting. Further, they must encourage user comprehension offering customization capabilities to different user-defined exploration scenarios and preferences according to the analysis needs. Overall, the challenge is to enable users to gain value and insights out of the data as rapidly as possible, minimizing the role of IT-expert in the loop.

The BigVis workshop aims at addressing the above challenges and issues by providing a forum for researchers and practitioners to discuss exchange and disseminate their work. BigVis attempts to attract attention from the research areas of Data Management & Mining, Information Visualization and Human-Computer Interaction and highlight novel works that bridge together these communities.


Workshop Topics


In the context of visual exploration and analytics, topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

- Visualization and exploration techniques for various Big Data types (e.g., stream, spatial, high-dimensional, graph)
- Human-centered database techniques
- Indexes and data structures for data visualization
- In Situ visual exploration and analytics
- Progressive visual analytics
- Interactive caching and prefetching
- Scalable visual operations (e.g., zooming, panning, linking, brushing)
- Big Data visual representation techniques (e.g., aggregation, sampling, multi-level, filtering)
- Setting-oriented visualization (e.g., display resolution/size, smart phones, pixel-oriented, visualization over networks)
- User-oriented visualization (e.g., assistance, personalization, recommendation)
- Visual analytics (e.g., pattern matching, timeseries analytics, prediction analysis, outlier detection, OLAP)
- Immersive visualization and visual analytics
- Visual and interactive data mining
- Models of human-in-the-loop data analysis
- High performance/Parallel techniques 
- Visualization hardware and acceleration techniques
- Linked Data and ontologies visualization
- Case and user studies
- Systems and tools


Submissions


- regular research papers (up to 8 pages)
- work-in-progress papers (up to 4 pages)
- vision papers (up to 4 pages)
- system papers and demos (up to 4 pages)


Important Dates


 Submission: December 30, 2018
 Notification: January 22, 2019
 Camera-ready: January 29, 2019
 Deadlines expire at 5pm PT
 Workshop: March 26, 2019	


Organizing Committee


 Nikos Bikakis, University of Ioannina, Greece
 Kwan-Liu Ma, University of California-Davis, USA	
 Olga Papaemmanouil, Brandeis University, USA
 George Papastefanatos, ATHENA Research Center, Greece