Interactive Information Visualization 2016-2017

Teaser

As the amount of on-line data is growing faster than the speed of computers to process them, it becomes harder and harder to analyze this data and to understand it both at a global level and a smaller scales. Such understanding is nevertheless a necessary prerequisite to any decision process. The goal of Information Visualization is to create visual representations that allow users to understand abstract data and to provide users with interaction capabilities that are designed to efficiently navigate and analyze these representations.

The course presents the most recent works in this research domain by successively looking at the various types of visualizations according to the type of data being analyzed: tabular data, hierarchical data, graphs, texts.

Course Instructors

If you have a question, feel free to e-mail us

Location and Time

Readings

There are no assigned books for this class but for further information we recommend the following resources

Requirements

Grading scheme

  • Student assignments (33% of the total grade)
  • Final exam + project presentation (66%)
    • The written exam will be a multiple-choice exam with some questions on the lecture content and some questions in which you will have to draw and/or assess visual representations. The exam will last 2 hours and occur after the last lecture on 21/02/2012. Your final exam grade will be a mix of presentation of your project and the result of your written exam.

PhD Students

PhD students who are enrolled in the class as part of the module d'ouverture scientifique do not receive grades and do not take the final exam unless explicitly asked for by their PhD advisor. In all cases, PhD students must participate to all class-related activities for their module to get validated. This includes being present at the lectures and at the lab sessions, presenting a paper and presenting their class project. PhD students who attend the class but cannot get it validated as a module d'ouverture scientifique are also required to participate to all class-related activities.

Homework

Weekly assignments are designed so that they do not require a lot of work per week.

Late Policy

For assignments we will deduct 10% for each day (including weekends) the assignment is late.

Plagiarism Policy

Assignments should consist primarily of your original work, building off of others' work--including 3rd party libraries, public source code examples, and design ideas--is acceptable and in most cases encouraged. However, failure to cite such sources will result in score deductions proportional to the severity of the oversight.

License

You can reuse the content of these pages for your class if you acknowledge us (Petra Isenberg, Jean-Daniel Fekete, Pierre Dragicevic, Wesley Willett and Frédéric Vernier):