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Origin-Destination Flow Maps in Immersive Environments

arXiv:1908.02089 · doi:10.1109/TVCG.2018.2865192

summary

The paper studies how to visualize origin‑destination flow data in immersive VR/AR settings, comparing 2D and 3D encodings and finding that raised 3D flows on globes improve accuracy and user preference.

Abstract

Immersive virtual- and augmented-reality headsets can overlay a flat image against any surface or hang virtual objects in the space around the user. The technology is rapidly improving and may, in the long term, replace traditional flat panel displays in many situations. When displays are no longer intrinsically flat, how should we use the space around the user for abstract data visualisation? In this paper, we ask this question with respect to origin-destination flow data in a global geographic context. We report on the findings of three studies exploring different spatial encodings for flow maps. The first experiment focuses on different 2D and 3D encodings for flows on flat maps. We find that participants are significantly more accurate with raised flow paths whose height is proportional to flow distance but fastest with traditional straight line 2D flows. In our second and third experiment, we compared flat maps, 3D globes and a novel interactive design we call MapsLink, involving a pair of linked flat maps. We find that participants took significantly more time with MapsLink than other flow maps while the 3D globe with raised flows was the fastest, most accurate, and most preferred method. Our work suggests that careful use of the third spatial dimension can resolve visual clutter in complex flow maps.

Presented at IEEE Conference on Information Visualization (InfoVis 2018). Part of PhD thesis arXiv:1908.00662

Topics & keywords

#flow maps#immersive visualization#virtual reality#augmented reality#3d encodingorigin-destination flowraised flow paths3D globeMapsLinkspatial encodinguser study