Posts Tagged ‘visualization’

Informing and Performing: Investigating How Mediated Sociality Becomes Visible - July 21st, 2011

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to former Informatics grad student Dr. Sharon Xianghua Ding, Informatics faculty member Don Patterson and their coauthors Wendy Kellog and Thomas Erickson on having their paper,
‘Informing and Performing: Investigating How Mediated Sociality Becomes Visible’ accepted to Personal and Ubiquitous Computing (Springer journal).

Abstract: In the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) and ubiquitous computing literature, making people’s presence and activities visible as a design approach has been extensively explored to enhance computer mediated interactions and collaborations. This process has developed under the rubrics of “awareness”, “social translucence”, “social activity indicators”, “social navigation”, etc. Although the name and details vary, the central ideas are similar. By making social presence and activities more visible or perceivable, they provide social context for members to make sense of situations and guide their activities more informatively and appropriately. In this work, we introduce a class of visualizations called social context displays, which use and share graphical representations to depict people’s presence and activity information with an explicit focus on groups. The aim of this work is to examine social context displays in use and contribute new abstractions for understanding how making social information more visible works in general. Through our first hand experience with user-centered design and empirical investigations of two social context displays in real settings, we uncovered not only how they provide social context to inform actions and decisions, but also how members perform and manage their self- and group-representations through the display. Drawing on Goffman’s performance framework, we provide a detailed description of how people react and respond to these two social context displays, and reconsider some of the broader issues associated with computer-mediated interactions such as privacy, context, and media richness.

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Posted: 7/21/11 5:00 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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LUCI is doing: FitBaby: Hospital to Home - May 9th, 2011

FitBaby: Hospital to Home

FitBaby: Hospital to Home

What has LUCI been up to recently?

FitBaby: Hospital to Home

Premature birth is associated with long term health impairments including neurological and cognitive deficiencies, chronic lung disease, and altered growth patterns of lean, fat, and bone tissues. Furthermore, parents of premature infants may experience excessive stress, post-partum depression, and other challenges associated with the birth of and caring for their child. We are designing, developing, and deploying technologies to detect abnormal baby movements in the NICU with accelerometers. Data collection continues as these high risk babies move home with a mobile solution for collecting infant and caregiver observations, sharing this data with their providers, and visualizing and summarizing these data. We are additionally developing a capture and access tool called Estrellita to share data with healthcare providers, close relatives, and friends.

More info

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Posted: 5/9/11 10:00 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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3D printer is up and working - November 8th, 2010

3D printer objects

3D printer objects

We just got our first home grown objects back from the 3D printer.  They were created in Blender and printed by our local guru, Sen.  They are… a skull, a LUCI logo, and a chain that was printed already connected.

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Posted: 11/8/10 10:34 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Technology Helps Teach Kids with Autism - October 27th, 2010

Promo video that was filmed based on Gillian’s work:
“UC Irvine informatics assistant professor Gillian Hayes designs computer devices to aid instruction, record-keeping. Video courtesy of Information and Computer Sciences, UC Irvine.
More here

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Posted: 10/27/10 5:35 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Javascript demo of a Bubble Cursor - September 23rd, 2010

Bubble Cursor Demo

Bubble Cursor Demo

See this paper for more info: The bubble cursor: enhancing target acquisition by dynamic resizing of the cursor’s activation area

Click here for the demo

Abstract of paper that explains what this is about:

“We present the bubble cursor – a new target acquisition technique based on area cursors. The bubble cursor improves upon area cursors by dynamically resizing its activation area depending on the proximity of surrounding targets, such that only one target is selectable at any time. We also present two controlled experiments that evaluate bubble cursor performance in 1D and 2D target acquisition tasks, in complex situations with multiple targets of varying layout densities. Results show that the bubble cursor significantly outperforms the point cursor and the object pointing technique [8], and that bubble cursor performance can be accurately modeled and predicted using Fitts’ law.”

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Posted: 9/23/10 9:20 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
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What if Your Twitter Followers Really Followed You? - June 4th, 2010

One of the major telecom companies in Japan, KDDI, released a web app called IS Parade (?) that turns your twitter account into a parade.  A parade in which your followers, follow you.  It is a fun visualization to play with.  I recorded a low-res sample below.  They also have a strangely addictive abstract interactive visualization on their product homepage, located here.

Found via DATAVISUALIZATION.CH



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Posted: 6/4/10 4:44 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Plasma is the new tag cloud - March 2nd, 2010

Plasma Visualization

Plasma Visualization

Plasma is a way to represent animated tag clouds with a new aesthetic. It’s being applied as a way to get a snap shot of AIDS research.

“Plasma is an interactive network of links and tags that belongs to a on-going research on AIDS, from an integral and holistic point of view.”

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Posted: 3/2/10 9:33 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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Science Reports on `Limits of Predictability in Human Mobility` - February 24th, 2010

Cell Phone Data Visualized

Cell Phone Data Visualized

It is not often that a study like this makes it into a journal like Science.

“A range of applications, from predicting the spread of human and electronic viruses to city planning and resource management in mobile communications, depend on our ability to foresee the whereabouts and mobility of individuals, raising a fundamental question: To what degree is human behavior predictable? Here we explore the limits of predictability in human dynamics by studying the mobility patterns of anonymized mobile phone users. By measuring the entropy of each individual’s trajectory, we find a 93% potential predictability in user mobility across the whole user base. Despite the significant differences in the travel patterns, we find a remarkable lack of variability in predictability, which is largely independent of the distance users cover on a regular basis.”

The whole article is available here:Limits of Predictability in Human Mobility — Song et al. 327 (5968): 1018 — Science

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Posted: 2/24/10 10:45 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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Visualize your Foursquare data - February 23rd, 2010

FourSquare HeatMap

FourSquare HeatMap

“CheckoutCheckins allows you to create a heat map of your Foursquare checkins. Once you log-in to the map with your Foursquare account it uses the places you’ve been to generate maps, charts, graphs, and stats.

CheckoutCheckins plots your last 50 entries using Google Maps and overlays a heat map of your most recent activity. The site also produces pie charts that provide a graphic presentation of your most often visited locations.”

Google Maps Mania: Foursquare on Google Maps

via Google Maps Mania

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Posted: 2/23/10 1:22 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Nissan Leaf Electric Car has some interesting interactions - December 15th, 2009

Leaf Dashboard Display

Leaf Dashboard Display

The Technology Review has an interesting report out about how the all-electric Nissan Leaf will be helping transition drivers from a gas-based fuel infrastructure to an electric one. It is particularly interesting to notice how email, mobile and location-aware applications become part of a user’s interactions with the car:

“The Leaf’s dashboard display will show remaining battery life, the location of charging stations, and which stations are within range. When the car gets low on power, the driver can put it into a “limp” mode so it drives at the most-efficient speed to ensure it gets there.”

Once the driver plugs a car into a charging station, Nissan sends e-mail updates on how the charge is progressing, and when it’s done. And finally, the owner can use a mobile device to switch on the car’s electric air-conditioner or heater before detaching it from the charging station, so as not to waste battery life after pulling away.

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Posted: 12/15/09 8:26 am UTC by Add Your Comment
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