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Hairy Slices: Evaluating the Perceptual Effectiveness of Cutting Plane Glyphs for 3D Vector Fields | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Hairy Slices: Evaluating the Perceptual Effectiveness of Cutting Plane Glyphs for 3D Vector Fields


Abstract:

Three-dimensional vector fields are common datasets throughout the sciences. Visualizing these fields is inherently difficult due to issues such as visual clutter and sel...Show More

Abstract:

Three-dimensional vector fields are common datasets throughout the sciences. Visualizing these fields is inherently difficult due to issues such as visual clutter and self-occlusion. Cutting planes are often used to overcome these issues by presenting more manageable slices of data. The existing literature provides many techniques for visualizing the flow through these cutting planes; however, there is a lack of empirical studies focused on the underlying perceptual cues that make popular techniques successful. This paper presents a quantitative human factors study that evaluates static monoscopic depth and orientation cues in the context of cutting plane glyph designs for exploring and analyzing 3D flow fields. The goal of the study was to ascertain the relative effectiveness of various techniques for portraying the direction of flow through a cutting plane at a given point, and to identify the visual cues and combinations of cues involved, and how they contribute to accurate performance. It was found that increasing the dimensionality of line-based glyphs into tubular structures enhances their ability to convey orientation through shading, and that increasing their diameter intensifies this effect. These tube-based glyphs were also less sensitive to visual clutter issues at higher densities. Adding shadows to lines was also found to increase perception of flow direction. Implications of the experimental results are discussed and extrapolated into a number of guidelines for designing more perceptually effective glyphs for 3D vector field visualizations.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics ( Volume: 23, Issue: 1, January 2017)
Page(s): 990 - 999
Date of Publication: 08 August 2016

ISSN Information:

PubMed ID: 27875212

Funding Agency:


1 Introduction

Flow visualization, a category of vector field visualization, deals primarily with velocities (speed and direction), and focuses on visually communicating features of interest such as critical points (saddles, sinks, and sources), maxima and minima, and specific flow patterns. 3D flow visualization is a natural extension of the 2D case, but is inherently more challenging, due to issues such as self-occlusion and visual clutter. Beyond just flow, these 3D vector fields are encountered in many scientific disciplines, where they represent everything from magnetic fields to stress and strain in materials.

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References

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