Visual Coherence for Large-Scale Line-Plot Visualizations
Philipp Muigg, Markus Hadwiger, Helmut Doleisch, Eduard Gröller
In Computer Graphics Forum, 30(3), June 2011.
Abstract: Displaying a large number of lines within a limited amount of screen space is a task that is common to many different classes of visualization techniques such as time-series visualizations, parallel coordinates, link-node diagrams, and phase-space diagrams. This paper addresses the challenging problems of cluttering and overdraw inherent to such visualizations. We generate a 2x2 tensor field during line rasterization that encodes the distribution of line orientations through each image pixel. Anisotropic diffusion of a noise texture is then used to generate a dense, coherent visualization of line orientation. In order to represent features of different scales, we employ a multi-resolution representation of the tensor field. The resulting technique can easily be applied to a wide variety of line-based visualizations. We demonstrate this for parallel coordinates, a time-series visualization, and a phase-space diagram. Furthermore, we demonstrate how to integrate a focus+context approach by incorporating a second tensor field. Our approach achieves interactive rendering performance for large data sets containing millions of data items, due to its image-based nature and ease of implementation on GPUs. Simulation results from computational fluid dynamics are used to evaluate the performance and usefulness of the proposed method.
@article{Muigg:2011:VCF,
author = {Philipp Muigg and Markus Hadwiger and Helmut Doleisch and Eduard Gröller},
title = {Visual Coherence for Large-Scale Line-Plot Visualizations},
journal = {Computer Graphics Forum},
volume = {30},
number = {3},
pages = {643--652},
month = jun,
year = {2011},
}
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