CS 171 Visualization 2008


I was shared this link on Del.ici.ous sorry cant remember by whom. It is the Havard school of engineering and applied sciences course, very inetersting.

Topics: (subject to change)
Data and Image Models
Visual Perception & Cognitive Principles
Color Encoding
Visualization Software Design
Designing 2D Graphs
Maps & Google Earth
Higher-dimensional Data
Unstructured Text and Document Collections
Trees and Networks
Scientific Visualization
Medical Visualization
Scientific Photography
Animation
Interaction Techniques
Social Visualization
Visualization & The Arts

Well I liked perusing the students visualisation projects below:

Abraham Passaglia
Baseball Player Value Indicators

Alex Chou
Visualization of Piano Music



Andrew Granoff
Hasty Pudding Ticket Sales Visualizer

Wen Huang Wang
Visualization of US Metropolitan House Market

Andrei Munteanu, Anjuli Kannan
Visualizing Synonym Chains

Bill Wright
2D Color Load Meter for Visualizing Annual HVAC Loads

Brett Thomas, Clara Blattler
Energy Success Rate: Re-evaluating Energy Efficiency

Wendy Bossons, Melanie Howell, and Tawa Taylor
Hurricane Katrina After Effects

Cindy Cheng
Visualizing Vocabulary

Daniel Carroll, Tyler Bosmeny
Visualizing Trends in Search Data Subsets

Daniel J. Hilferty
Visualizing the National Budget

Daniel Suo
Emily Dickinson Revisited

David Kosslyn, Rajaraman Sundaram
Visually Del.icio.us

David Reshef
Vibrio Cholera Computational and Graphical Database

David Ng
NBA Player and Team Performance Trends

Derek Horton
HyperVisualizer: Visualizing Virtual Machines

Diana MacLean
Crime and Perceptions of Crime in Boston

Katie Fifer, Doug Lloyd
Visualizing the US's Subprime Mortgage Crisis and its Effects on the Economy

Douglas Alan
An Interactive Tool for Exploring Dendrogram Representations of Spectral Line Data Cubes

Eric Gieseke
Where and what are the current hazardous threats?

Gregory Gimler, Trung Tran
Natural Disasters Around The World

Peter V. Henstock
Understanding the Sequence of Learning Japanese Kanji

J.R. Hass
Visualizing Related Images Using The Image Gist Algorithm

Jesse Fish
A Visual Analysis of Movies, Actors and Actresses Using IMDB

Jesse Rader, Samir Paul
Harvard by the Numbers

Jonathan Tsao
Wikivisia: A Graph Visualization of Articles in Wikipedia

Jue Wang, Giancarlo Garcia
Where's the Music? (Concert Locations Visualization)

Karen Feng
LinkTracr: tracing links through the blogosphere

Katie Grosteffon
Nursing Home Care

Elizabeth Lemon
Book sharing patterns among users of BookCrossing.com

Nick Chammas, Mark Garro
Visualizing a Machine's Thought-Process (Game Analysis with a Min-Max/Alpha-Beta Search Engine)

Mark Yetter
South Korea's Age Income Landscape in a World of Change

Matthew Huchu, Lilli Gilligan
Thermal Engineering plc: Departmental Performance Noticeboard

Hao-Yuh Su
Music Trend Visualization

Penelope Cuevas
Healthcare Costs

Qing Gao
Mining Audioscrobbler

Roanna Ruiz
Visualizing the Normal and Post-Stroke Brain

Savita Sahgal
Visualizing SUV attributes to make a better buying decision

Silpa Kovvali, Teddy Sherrill
Economics and Performance in the National Basketball Association

Steven Vasilakos
Effective Dashboard Design

Tara Murphy-Volz
State Relocation Assistant

Thomas Carriero, Jie Tang
Visualizing My Inbox

Thomas Wionzek
50 Years of the Dollar: Currency Strength Animated Timeline

Tina Tang
Visualizing Academic Networks

Timothy Knell
Visualizing Sarah Jane Studios

Victor Lan
Top news stories for the day?

William Cheng
Visualization of Extrasolar Planetary Systems

shame some links dont work.

well ofund here, with the course details as well. http://www.seas.harvard.edu/courses/cs171/



Free Visual Posters 2 CS 171 Visualization 2008 Vis%20Mag%20 %20blog%20sidebar CS 171 Visualization 2008
available web ad CS 171 Visualization 2008 available web ad CS 171 Visualization 2008
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Related posts:

  1. What Is Isometric?
  2. Web Trend Map 2008 Beta
  3. 12 Great Music Visualisations
  4. Eustace Tilley Subway by Alberto Forero (2008)
  5. Web Trend Map 09


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1 Comment »

  1. bigredtricycle says:

    I'm intrigued by the Visualizing Synonym Chains by Andrei Munteanu & Anjuli Kannan. Indeed, I find myself hungry for a tool that can bridge two words through an elegant network of synonyms. Or if possible try the applet out, though doesn't seem to be running.

    I'm an information architect, and the use of taxonometric tools are valuable.

    --Matthew
    spellmanbiz@hotmail.com

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Carto Narratives

27e507b96c9d35f382760edab22ffc09 Carto Narratives



Going to Carto Narratives in Zurich soon (11th june - 13th june) to participate in a workshop with some great people, William Cartwright, Jeremy Wood, Sebastien Caquard... loads of others I've still to have a good read of their proposals. Read mine on augmented reality/hyper real/emotion + joy

http://cartonarratives.wordpress.com/projects/

Share your views of Bachelard as I am reading up on how he perceives people can enhance their happiness from spaces... and how they engage with a space...  many more other people but still getting my head around him, and how he fits with my project...

Visualthinkmap on Pinterest

4d04647d2f639ddfa97787f2b9f2bc73 Visualthinkmap on Pinterest

         

Please forgive if I haven't been blogging as often as I could but you can keep a regular update on here:

http://pinterest.com/visualthinkmap/interesting-things-on-the-web-shift-space/

  Much like I used too on tumblr: http://visualthinkmap.tumblr.com/

Checkout an Interview of me with Shrieking Violets & Shift-Space

e33318033da097283908905ed5463fbe Checkout an Interview of me with Shrieking Violets & Shift Space



Checkout an interview of us (shift-space.co.uk) describing our practice, zines, little gems app, vb workshop and general views on education/visual practice...

http://www.theshriekingviolets.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/alice-in-apps-land-workshop-from-zines.html  

Alice in Apps Land - Future Everything/Victoria Baths

fde749ebda1e6a4b5b90d5d5b6002a74 Alice in Apps Land   Future Everything/Victoria Baths

Working in  a collective with my colleagues, Shift-Space are very excited to be a part of the futureeverything festival taking place in Manchester in May. Natalie aka, the shrieking violet has invited us to run some workshops as part of the fanzine convention taking place on the Saturday and we also plan to have our own display of zines and other printed ephemera.



‘Alice in apps land: explore your smart phone and your environment’, presented by Visual Think Map in collaboration with Shift Space.

During this workshop you will discover the local landscape through digital stories and learn more about apps and the functionality of how your phone can enliven the world around you. Through an interactive and engaging tour of the area near Victoria Baths you will discover and digitally collate, using your phone, a variety of people’s memories and your own as we introduce you to new apps and narratives, including old photos and memorabilia of the area. We’ll finish by making an interactive map where everyone can share what they’ve made and then print a map. DON’T FORGET TO BRING YOUR PHONE AND WE’LL SEE YOU THERE!

Motivation Rose

4ab420050b0c7ce0ec6c80ee0f0f6c95 Motivation Rose

This is a good use of the nightingale rose to show the motivations of crowdsourcing/job.



It gives a good overview of the different factors to motivate crowd sourcing or those of a job and I suppose we do aim to have each full.

Anyhow, was a good use of the rose around an interesting subject area. http://webdirecting.com

Stockport Narratives

6a8b517ae39fa019166755d551dba986 Stockport Narratives

Love this map made by Christian Nold.  

 

http://stockport.emotionmap.net/background.htm

'Whilst conventional maps show static architecture and exclude humans, this art project presents a vision of Stockport that represents the emotions, opinions and desires of local people. Over a period of two months in summer 2007, about 200 people took part in six public mapping events. This map collects together and shows the results of the two activities: Drawing Provocations & Emotion Mapping.'  

The sort of tubes/pillars represent the emotions of people at particular locations using the GPS/GRS device invented by christian nold. Its no surprise that Christian has worked with looking into perceptions of an area as he had done similar when featured in http://vism.ag/vol2 and he has done other areas.

If you like this then you'll certainly want to have a read of his free pdf book of Emotional Cartography, http://emotionalcartography.net/EmotionalCartographyLow.pdf  

Check out his projects here: http://www.softhook.com/  

Splitscreen: A love Story

This is a very cool video. Two lives, synced, with timing/composition/speed/angles. Wow.



I wanted more. The angling for the plane is measured, the turning of the bus, the lovely jump in time zones/locations as a cyclist seemingly jumps through a crack linking these two locations.

Love it! Originally saw it on amazing films interludes on channel 5 (uk)

Route 66 Story Map

This is a great project on mapping the history and narratives of a journey/terrain. A sort of map that is more interesting than the territory that Houellebecq proposed.

http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&t=k&om=1&msid=103763259662194171141.000001119b4b42bf062c2&msa=0

Looking to use video and record data on a journey, much like Stephen Shore has done on his journey's across america but only through photography. Just multimedia and more forms of it. I'd like to merge the projects Poetry Atlas & History Pin and maybe this atlascine.org that I recently saw but not just Canada.

See http://artcarto.wordpress.com/cartography-narratives/ for more about Story Maps.

More about the project 'Jay Crim and Shekar Davarya spent the summer of 2002 driving across the country on Route 66, collecting interviews with the people who live, work and travel on the old road. The audio, video and images on this map are the result of that summer, and offer a glimpse into what life was like on the now-decommissioned highway and what remains for those who still travel the road. The America's Highway project was intended to create both a history lesson on America of the past as well as a travel guide for visitors on 66 today. The work was supervised by Professor Bill Leslie, History of Science Department and Mike Reese, Center for Educational Resources, The Johns Hopkins University.'

Long Live the Printed Book!

Recently recieved You know nothing of my work by Doug Coupland.



I shared this page because mapping the knowlegde, synapses in the brain and thoughts, to try represent the self in some visual and communicable level inspired me in my studies. To present them to provide understanding of my knowledge is what got me into mind mapping. Essays of just long written linear text of roughly 12 words-per-line, 500 words-per-page, just isn't enough for me. Macluhan studied the mapping of the brain and called it Pathogrpahy, and i'm sure i'll be digggin deeper into his research. Dont want to spoil the book but phew, macluhan had an interesting perspective on women... reflected by the times i suppose.

Saw his book from this brilliant documentary here, cant believe you can sit have a coffee while a chosen book is freshly printed. (smell the middle) Long live the printed book!

By the way just found this beautiful tutorial from these: here

Escape the Map

This ad for Mercedes Benz is really intriguing how google maps vernacular infiltrates reality. Escape The Map



Its been out a while the ad and had meant to post sooner. It is intriguing because I imagine that a projection on the road with the street view would help with sat nav's as opposed to trying to glance to your right to see a sat nav. You could just stare at the street. Would be cool.

But from a mapping point of view I was interested as it mixes the hyper real through the vernacular of google maps with reality. Now from my experiences I had learnt that hyper real was associated with the postmodern and specifically baudrillard 'the map preceedes the territory'. Jean Baudrillard argues that a simulacrum is not a copy of the real, but becomes truth in its own right: the hyperreal.

Having looked at a recent paper by Sébastien Caquard, Cartography I: Mapping narrative cartography. See here: http://phg.sagepub.com/content/early/2011/11/06/0309132511423796

Sebastien points out an interesting view of the story map, this is the fictional representation, the story map as Sébastien Caquard puts it;

‘map is more interesting than the territory because it is an idealized simplification of a complex – and often depressing – reality. This resonates with the idea that in the postmodern world most of the time the hyper-real appears joyful beside the deterioration of the environment to which it refers (Westphal, 2007).’

See now this idea of the postmodern hyerreality being joyful is what I remember with Baudrillard and simulacra's, but I wasn't aware of the map is more intersting than the territory a point illustrated by the latest novel by Michel Houllebecq entitled La Carte et le Territoire (The Map and the Territory) (2010).

I'm not sure how we're supposed to weigh between Baudrillard or Houllebecq, but like how Sebastien says they follow with this idea of the joyful presentations of reality. Many of the these joyful selections that have been crowd sourced by google maps.

'Paraphrasing Houellebecq, in other words, ‘Google Maps are more interesting than the territory’.'

This leaves me very intrigued that the story maps that Google are providing are more interesting than reality, much in the repsect that this Escape the Map ad by Mercedes Benz particularly realises well.

It makes me want to visit, or at least try to read the videos / papers that transpire from this: Cartography & Narratives

Meanwhile, read more about the different perspectives on the map and the territory here

I have been trying to get Vism.ag/Vol 4  available in print away from P.O.Demand services and got decent prices too, but still trying to find investment to do a long enough run to realistically make it viable. But... I will try to get an ebook available of it soon and the reason I bring it up is that there are a few selections of work by Denis Wood in the online sample and there's a review of his book Everthing Sings: Maps for a Narrative Atlas that I'm sure will be of essential reading to cross reference with the thoughts of the Story Map and fictional cartography. (the word fictional still distracts me as google maps work on a degree of truth, they arent made up).

Anyhow, happy hols everyone and will try to get more posts up. In the mean time, follow @visualthinkmap on twitter for more of what I see, just less analysis.