Bögl, M., Aigner, W., Filzmoser, P., Lammarsch, T., Miksch, S., & Rind, A. (2013). Visual Analytics for Model Selection in Time Series Analysis. IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, 19(12), 2237–2246. https://doi.org/10.1109/tvcg.2013.222
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
-
ISSN:
1077-2626
-
Date (published):
12-Dec-2013
-
Number of Pages:
10
-
Publisher:
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
-
Peer reviewed:
Yes
-
Keywords:
Software; Visual analytics; time series analysis; Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design; model selection; Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition; Signal Processing; coordinated &; multiple views; visual interaction
-
Abstract:
Model selection in time series analysis is a challenging task for domain experts in many application areas such as epidemiology, economy, or environmental sciences. The methodology used for this task demands a close combination of human judgement and automated computation. However, statistical software tools do not adequately support this combination through interactive visual interfaces. We propose a Visual Analytics process to guide domain experts in this task. For this purpose, we developed the TiMoVA prototype that implements this process based on user stories and iterative expert feedback on user experience. The prototype was evaluated by usage scenarios with an example dataset from epidemiology and interviews with two external domain experts in statistics. The insights from the experts' feedback and the usage scenarios show that TiMoVA is able to support domain experts in model selection tasks through interactive visual interfaces with short feedback cycles.
en
Project title:
CVAST: Centre for Visual Analytics Science and Technology (Laura Bassi Centre of Expertise) HypoVis: Modeling Hypotheses with Visual Analytics Methods to Analyze the Past and Forecast the Future (Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF))
-
Research Areas:
Business Informatics: 20% Visual Computing and Human-Centered Technology: 80%