HCFeb 26, 2015

Visualizing Cartograms: Goals and Task Taxonomy

arXiv:1502.07792v26 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses a gap in visualization research for cartograms, which are widely used but under-evaluated, though it is incremental as it builds on existing taxonomies.

The paper tackles the lack of studies evaluating cartogram effectiveness by proposing a task taxonomy based on standard taxonomies from cartography and information visualization, to help design and compare cartograms as a visualization tool.

Cartograms are maps in which areas of geographic regions (countries, states) appear in proportion to some variable of interest (population, income). Cartograms are popular visualizations for geo-referenced data that have been around for over a century. Newspapers, magazines, textbooks, blogs, and presentations frequently employ cartograms to show voting results, popularity, and in general, geographic patterns. Despite the popularity of cartograms and the large number of cartogram variants, there are very few studies evaluating the effectiveness of cartograms in conveying information. In order to design cartograms as a useful visualization tool and to be able to compare the effectiveness of cartograms generated by different methods, we need to study the nature of information conveyed and the specific tasks that can be performed on cartograms. In this paper we consider a set of cartogram visualization tasks, based on standard taxonomies from cartography and information visualization. We then propose a cartogram task taxonomy that can be used to organize not only the tasks considered here but also other tasks that might be added later.

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