Insight

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Revision as of 10:40, 12 November 2007 by Iwolf (talk | contribs) (Added definition by Goldstein.)
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We define an insight as an individual observation about the data by the participant, a unit of discovery.
[Saraiya et al., 2005]
Insight: The capacity to discern the true nature of a situation; The act or outcome of grasping the inward or hidden nature of things or of perceiving in an intuitive manner.
[Merriam-Webster]


The Gestalt psychologists also introduced the idea that restructuring is associated with insight--sudden realization of the problem's solution.
[Goldstein, 2005]



Important characteristics of insight in Information Visualization as defined by Chris North:

Complex. Insight is complex, involving all or large amounts of the given data in a synergistic way, not simply individual data values.
Deep. Insight builds up over time, accumulating and building on itself to create depth. Insight often generates further questions and, hence, further insight.
Qualitative. Insight is not exact, can be uncertain and subjective, and can have multiple levels of resolusion.
Unexpected. Insight is often unpredictable, serendipitous, and creative.
Relevant. Insight is deeply embedded in the data domain, connecting the data to existing domain knowledge and giving it relevant meaning. It goes beyond dry data analysis, to relevant domain impact.
[North, 2006]


References

  • [Goldstein, 2005] Goldstein, Bruce. Cognitive Psychology, Thomson Wadsworth, 2005.
  • [North, 2006] Chris North, Toward Measuring Visualization Insight. IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications', 26(3):6-9, 2006.
  • [Saraiya et al., 2005] Purvi Saraiya, Chris North, and Karen Duca, An Insight-Based Methodology for

Evaluating Bioinformatics Visualizations, IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, 11(4):443-456, July/August 2005.