Multiple time series are a set of multiple quantitative variables occurring at the same interval. They are present in many domains such as medicine, finance, and manufacturing for analytical purposes. In recent years, streamgraph visualization (evolved from ThemeRiver) has been widely used for representing temporal evolution patterns in multiple time series. However, streamgraph as well as ThemeRiver suffer from scalability problems when dealing with several time series. To solve this problem, multiple time series can be organized into a hierarchical structure where individual time series are grouped hierarchically according to their proximity. In this paper, we present a new streamgraph-based approach to convey the hierarchical structure of multiple time series to facilitate the exploration and comparisons of temporal evolution. Based on a focus+context technique, our method allows time series exploration at different granularities (e.g., from overview to details). To illustrate our approach, two usage examples are presented.
Many real world data can be represented by a network with a set of nodes linked each other by multiple relations. Such a rich graph is called multilayer graph. In this demo, we present a tool for Visual Querying of Large Multilayer Graphs that allows to visually draw the query, retrieve result patterns and finally navigate and browse the results considering the original multilayer graph database. Our approach does not only provide a graphical user interface for the graph engine but the query processing is fully integrated.
Social networks are a dominant data source for sharing, participation, and exchanging information. For example, Twitter is a microblogging site that enables users to express opinions by transmitting brief messages (i.e., Tweets). Tweets can be used to extract information on users’ movements or trajectories over time. Information visualization (InfoVis) is helpful to understand, analyze, and make decisions about these trajectories. To better understand and compare existing visual encoding methods in InfoVis, we propose
TrajectoryVis
, a generic trajectory visualization tool to represent social network datasets (e.g., Twitter). Individual and aggregated trajectories can be visualized using different visual coding approaches. Our approach is assessed using a user and a COVID-19 case study to prove its effectiveness.
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