HCJul 23, 2021

Rethinking the Ranks of Visual Channels

arXiv:2107.11367v13 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a foundational problem in visualization design by showing that current channel rankings are inadequate for real-world tasks involving multiple values, which is incremental but crucial for improving data representation accuracy.

The study challenged the assumption that existing rankings of visual channels based on two-value ratio judgments hold for different tasks and mark counts, finding that the rankings did not hold even for two marks and were inconsistent across 2, 4, or 8 marks, with factors like mark count and value having more influence on performance.

Data can be visually represented using visual channels like position, length or luminance. An existing ranking of these visual channels is based on how accurately participants could report the ratio between two depicted values. There is an assumption that this ranking should hold for different tasks and for different numbers of marks. However, there is little existing work testing assumption, especially given that visually computing ratios is relatively unimportant in real-world visualizations, compared to seeing, remembering, and comparing trends and motifs, across displays that almost universally depict more than two values. We asked participants to immediately reproduce a set of values from memory. With a Bayesian multilevel modeling approach, we observed how the relevant rank positions of visual channels shift across different numbers of marks (2, 4 or 8) and for bias, precision, and error measures. The ranking did not hold, even for reproductions of only 2 marks, and the new ranking was highly inconsistent for reproductions of different numbers of marks. Other factors besides channel choice far more influence on performance, such as the number of values in the series (e.g. more marks led to larger errors), or the value of each mark (e.g. small values are systematically overestimated). Recall was worse for displays with 8 marks than 4, consistent with established limits on visual memory. These results show that we must move beyond two-value ratio judgments as a baseline for ranking the quality of a visual channel, including testing new tasks (detection of trends or motifs), timescales (immediate computation, or later comparison), and the number of values (from a handful, to thousands).

Foundations

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