Kavinda Athapaththu

2papers

2 Papers

44.2HCApr 11
SemiConLens: Visual Analytics for 2D Semiconductor Discovery

Kavinda Athapaththu, Shiwei Chen, Yuan Fang et al.

The past few years have witnessed vibrant efforts in discovering new two-dimensional (2D) semiconductor materials from both academia and the industry, due to their promising potential in resolving the severe performance deterioration of traditional semiconductors resulting from condensed silicon thickness. However, existing methods (e.g., Density Functional Theory (DFT) or machine-learning-based approaches) suffer from various challenges such as small datasets, and reliability and trustworthiness issues. To bridge this gap, we propose SemiConLens, a visual analytics approach to combine human expertise with the power of ML to enable effective and reliable 2D semiconductor discovery. Specifically, we first develop a new Correlation Aware Multivariate Imputation (CAMI) method and use ML models like autoencoder, which can better learn from limited data and reveal uncertainty, to address the challenge of sparse data in semiconductivity prediction. Built upon this, our visualization module, consisting of three visualization views with linked interactions, allows material researchers to interactively filter, discover and compare 2D semiconductor candidates. A novel circular glyph design and a new cluster-aware layout optimization approach are proposed to effectively display all the user-configurable key attributes and possible prediction uncertainties of each semiconductor candidate, ensuring a reliable and trustable 2D semiconductor discovery. We assess SemiConLens through quantitative evaluations, expert interviews, and use cases. The results demonstrate SemiConLens's capability to help material researchers conduct effective discovery of desirable 2D semiconductors.

96.5HCApr 25
Proteus: Shapeshifting Desktop Visualizations for Mobile via Multi-level Intelligent Adaptation

Can Liu, Sizhe Cheng, Feng Liang et al.

With the rise of mobile-first consumption, users increasingly engage with data visualizations on mobile devices. However, the vast majority of existing visualizations are originally authored for desktop environments. Due to significant differences in viewport size and interaction paradigms, directly scaling desktop charts often results in illegible text, information loss, and interaction failures. To bridge this gap, we propose an automated framework to adapt desktop-based visualizations for mobile screens. By systematically categorizing the operations involved in the adaptation process, we establish a multi-level design space. This space defines evolution rules spanning from the global topology level, through the reference frame level, down to the visual elements level. Guided by this theoretical framework, we developed Proteus, a large language model-driven multi-agent system that automatically parses online visualizations, predicts optimal transformation strategies within the design space, and generates equivalent, highly readable visualizations for mobile devices. Case studies and an in-depth user study with 12 participants demonstrate the effectiveness and usability of Proteus.