Dennis Bromley

h-index24
2papers

2 Papers

11.8HCMay 4
From 'Here' to 'There': Exploring Proximity Semantics in Multimodal Data Exploration

Dennis Bromley, Diana Wang, Vidya Setlur

Modern data exploration tools often struggle to capture the subtleties of analytical intent, especially when users seek patterns that are difficult to specify using traditional query methods or natural language alone. We introduce a multimodal research probe for querying time-series and geospatial data that integrates free-form sketching, natural language, and visual annotations within a unified interaction space. Users articulate queries by sketching trends or spatial paths and augmenting them with annotations and analytical directives grounded in shared spatial and temporal context. The system employs a hybrid architecture combining geometric sketch matching and visual language models (VLMs) to support queries that interleave pattern matching and semantic constraints. Through a preliminary study with 20 participants, we observed recurring interaction patterns in which participants used spatial, temporal, and visual proximity to relate sketches, annotations, and language. Rather than treating these as isolated inputs, participants relied on their relative placement to disambiguate meaning. We analyze these behaviors as evidence for proximity semantics (PS), a form of deictic disambiguation in which meaning is shaped by the closeness of multimodal elements within a shared interaction space. We present PS as a conceptual lens grounded in observed user behavior, and discuss its implications for the design of future multimodal data exploration systems.

HCMar 29, 2025
DATAWEAVER: Authoring Data-Driven Narratives through the Integrated Composition of Visualization and Text

Yu Fu, Dennis Bromley, Vidya Setlur

Data-driven storytelling has gained prominence in journalism and other data reporting fields. However, the process of creating these stories remains challenging, often requiring the integration of effective visualizations with compelling narratives to form a cohesive, interactive presentation. To help streamline this process, we present an integrated authoring framework and system, DataWeaver, that supports both visualization-to-text and text-to-visualization composition. DataWeaver enables users to create data narratives anchored to data facts derived from "call-out" interactions, i.e., user-initiated highlights of visualization elements that prompt relevant narrative content. In addition to this "vis-to-text" composition, DataWeaver also supports a "text-initiated" approach, generating relevant interactive visualizations from existing narratives. Key findings from an evaluation with 13 participants highlighted the utility and usability of DataWeaver and the effectiveness of its integrated authoring framework. The evaluation also revealed opportunities to enhance the framework by refining filtering mechanisms and visualization recommendations and better support authoring creativity by introducing advanced customization options.