Characterizing Visualization Insights through Entity-Based Interaction: An Exploratory Study
One of the primary purposes of visualization is to assist users in discovering insights. While there has been much research in information visualization aiming at complex data transformation and novel presentation techniques, relatively little has been done to understand how users derive insights through interactive visualization of data. This paper presents a crowdsourced study with 158 participants investigating the relation between entity-based interaction (an action + its target entity) and the resulting insight. To this end, we generalized the interaction with an existing CO2 Explorer as entity-based interaction and enabled users to input notes and refer to relevant entities to assist their narratives. We logged interactions of users freely exploring the visualization and characterized their externalized insights about the data. Using entity-based interactions and references to infer insight characteristics (category, overview versus detail, and prior knowledge), we found evidence that compared with interactions, entity references improved insight characterization from slight/fair to fair/moderate agreements. To interpret prediction outcomes, feature importance and correlation analysis indicated that, e.g., detailed insights tended to have more mouse-overs in the chart area and cite the vertical reference lines in the line chart as evidence. We discuss study limitations and implications on knowledge-assisted visualization, e.g., insight recommendations based on user exploration.
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