Visualization researchers and visualization professionals seek
appropriate abstractions of visualization requirements that
permit considering visualization solutions independently from
specific problems. Abstractions can help us design, analyze,
organize, and evaluate the things we create. The literature has
many task structures (taxonomies, typologies, etc.), design
spaces, and related ``frameworks'' that provide abstractions of
the problems a visualization is meant to address. In this
Visualization Viewpoints article, we introduce a different one, a
problem space that complements existing frameworks by focusing on
the needs that a visualization is meant to solve. We believe it
provides a valuable conceptual tool for designing and discussing
visualizations.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Gleicher2023-yj
%A Gleicher, Michael
%A Riveiro, Maria
%A von Landesberger, Tatiana
%A Deussen, Oliver
%A Chang, Remco
%A Gillman, Christina
%A Rhyne, Theresa-Marie
%D 2023
%J IEEE Comput. Graph. Appl.
%K problem visualizations designing from:scadsfct space
%N 4
%P 111--120
%T A problem space for designing visualizations
%V 43
%X Visualization researchers and visualization professionals seek
appropriate abstractions of visualization requirements that
permit considering visualization solutions independently from
specific problems. Abstractions can help us design, analyze,
organize, and evaluate the things we create. The literature has
many task structures (taxonomies, typologies, etc.), design
spaces, and related ``frameworks'' that provide abstractions of
the problems a visualization is meant to address. In this
Visualization Viewpoints article, we introduce a different one, a
problem space that complements existing frameworks by focusing on
the needs that a visualization is meant to solve. We believe it
provides a valuable conceptual tool for designing and discussing
visualizations.
@article{Gleicher2023-yj,
abstract = {Visualization researchers and visualization professionals seek
appropriate abstractions of visualization requirements that
permit considering visualization solutions independently from
specific problems. Abstractions can help us design, analyze,
organize, and evaluate the things we create. The literature has
many task structures (taxonomies, typologies, etc.), design
spaces, and related ``frameworks'' that provide abstractions of
the problems a visualization is meant to address. In this
Visualization Viewpoints article, we introduce a different one, a
problem space that complements existing frameworks by focusing on
the needs that a visualization is meant to solve. We believe it
provides a valuable conceptual tool for designing and discussing
visualizations.},
added-at = {2025-01-07T12:46:34.000+0100},
author = {Gleicher, Michael and Riveiro, Maria and von Landesberger, Tatiana and Deussen, Oliver and Chang, Remco and Gillman, Christina and Rhyne, Theresa-Marie},
biburl = {https://puma.scadsai.uni-leipzig.de/bibtex/2ba895f53778752d5593d1ff55ccd08b3/scads.ai},
interhash = {d51c46b2576eebe8130de29ef7612be8},
intrahash = {ba895f53778752d5593d1ff55ccd08b3},
journal = {IEEE Comput. Graph. Appl.},
keywords = {problem visualizations designing from:scadsfct space},
language = {en},
month = jul,
number = 4,
pages = {111--120},
timestamp = {2025-01-07T12:46:34.000+0100},
title = {A problem space for designing visualizations},
volume = 43,
year = 2023
}