MultiLens: Fluent Interaction with Multi-Functional Multi-Touch Lenses for Information Visualization
U. Kister, P. Reipschläger, and R. Dachselt. Proceedings of the 2016 ACM International Conference on Interactive Surfaces and Spaces, page 139–148. New York, NY, USA, Association for Computing Machinery, (2016)
DOI: 10.1145/2992154.2992168
Abstract
Interactive lenses have proven to be useful for many visualization applications where exploratory analysis is a primary task. Up to now, interaction with lenses is mostly limited to single-user, single-function lenses operated by mouse, keyboard and traditional parameter menus. To overcome these limitations, we propose MultiLens, touch-enabled magic lenses for fluently manipulating functions, parameters, and combinations of lenses on interactive surfaces. We contribute a novel multi-touch menu technique for magic lenses using a widget-based approach with a drag-snap slider for relative parameter adjustment. We also propose a continuous gesture set for rapidly changing lenses and their primary parameters in one seamless phrase. In addition, by supporting the combination of various lens functions, we create a generic multi-purpose lens tool. We illustrate our approach by investigating and implementing the concepts for the field of graph exploration. The prototype was evaluated in a user study with 22 participants comparing it to traditional parameter menus operated with both mouse and touch.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 10.1145/2992154.2992168
%A Kister, Ulrike
%A Reipschläger, Patrick
%A Dachselt, Raimund
%B Proceedings of the 2016 ACM International Conference on Interactive Surfaces and Spaces
%C New York, NY, USA
%D 2016
%I Association for Computing Machinery
%K exploration, focus+context graph information interaction, lenses, magic multi-touch visualization,
%P 139–148
%R 10.1145/2992154.2992168
%T MultiLens: Fluent Interaction with Multi-Functional Multi-Touch Lenses for Information Visualization
%U https://doi.org/10.1145/2992154.2992168
%X Interactive lenses have proven to be useful for many visualization applications where exploratory analysis is a primary task. Up to now, interaction with lenses is mostly limited to single-user, single-function lenses operated by mouse, keyboard and traditional parameter menus. To overcome these limitations, we propose MultiLens, touch-enabled magic lenses for fluently manipulating functions, parameters, and combinations of lenses on interactive surfaces. We contribute a novel multi-touch menu technique for magic lenses using a widget-based approach with a drag-snap slider for relative parameter adjustment. We also propose a continuous gesture set for rapidly changing lenses and their primary parameters in one seamless phrase. In addition, by supporting the combination of various lens functions, we create a generic multi-purpose lens tool. We illustrate our approach by investigating and implementing the concepts for the field of graph exploration. The prototype was evaluated in a user study with 22 participants comparing it to traditional parameter menus operated with both mouse and touch.
%@ 9781450342483
@inproceedings{10.1145/2992154.2992168,
abstract = {Interactive lenses have proven to be useful for many visualization applications where exploratory analysis is a primary task. Up to now, interaction with lenses is mostly limited to single-user, single-function lenses operated by mouse, keyboard and traditional parameter menus. To overcome these limitations, we propose MultiLens, touch-enabled magic lenses for fluently manipulating functions, parameters, and combinations of lenses on interactive surfaces. We contribute a novel multi-touch menu technique for magic lenses using a widget-based approach with a drag-snap slider for relative parameter adjustment. We also propose a continuous gesture set for rapidly changing lenses and their primary parameters in one seamless phrase. In addition, by supporting the combination of various lens functions, we create a generic multi-purpose lens tool. We illustrate our approach by investigating and implementing the concepts for the field of graph exploration. The prototype was evaluated in a user study with 22 participants comparing it to traditional parameter menus operated with both mouse and touch.},
added-at = {2024-10-02T10:38:17.000+0200},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
author = {Kister, Ulrike and Reipschl\"{a}ger, Patrick and Dachselt, Raimund},
biburl = {https://puma.scadsai.uni-leipzig.de/bibtex/2bd31c9501bfce51e96e8eb06fd71f0e0/scadsfct},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2016 ACM International Conference on Interactive Surfaces and Spaces},
doi = {10.1145/2992154.2992168},
interhash = {93ac74fd42601a2dc7bd85550616afcc},
intrahash = {bd31c9501bfce51e96e8eb06fd71f0e0},
isbn = {9781450342483},
keywords = {exploration, focus+context graph information interaction, lenses, magic multi-touch visualization,},
location = {Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada},
numpages = {10},
pages = {139–148},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
series = {ISS '16},
timestamp = {2024-10-02T10:38:17.000+0200},
title = {MultiLens: Fluent Interaction with Multi-Functional Multi-Touch Lenses for Information Visualization},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/2992154.2992168},
year = 2016
}