Annie T. Chen

2papers

2 Papers

CLSep 29, 2021
Reflexivity in Issues of Scale and Representation in a Digital Humanities Project

Annie T. Chen, Camille Lyans Cole

In this paper, we explore issues that we have encountered in developing a pipeline that combines natural language processing with data analysis and visualization techniques. The characteristics of the corpus - being comprised of diaries of a single person spanning several decades - present both conceptual challenges in terms of issues of representation, and affordances as a source for historical research. We consider these issues in a team context with a particular focus on the generation and interpretation of visualizations.

HCMay 27, 2016
Visual Model Validation via Inline Replication

David Gotz, Brandon A. Price, Annie T. Chen

Data visualizations typically show retrospective views of an existing dataset with little or no focus on repeatability. However, consumers of these tools often use insights gleaned from retrospective visualizations as the basis for decisions about future events. In this way, visualizations often serve as visual predictive models despite the fact that they are typically designed to present historical views of the data. This "visual predictive model" approach, however, can lead to invalid inferences. In this paper, we describe an approach to visual model validation called Inline Replication (IR) which, similar to the cross-validation technique used widely in machine learning, provides a nonparametric and broadly applicable technique for visual model assessment and repeatability. This paper describes the overall IR process and outlines how it can be integrated into both traditional and emerging "big data" visualization pipelines. Examples are provided showing IR integrated within common visualization techniques (such as bar charts and linear regression lines) as well as a more fully-featured visualization system designed for complex exploratory analysis tasks.