Poster Presentations, Mon May 12!
See the flyer.
Welcome
Welcome to the course Website for i247, Information Visualization and
Presentation!
Instructor
Marti Hearst (hearst@ischool.berkeley.edu)
212 South Hall, 510-642-8016
Office Hours: Mon, Wed, 2-3pm, 212 South Hall.
TA
Hannes Hesse (hannes@ischool.berkeley.edu)
Office Hours: Mondays 3-4pm in room 210.
Course Objectives
The goal of information visualization is the unveiling of the underlying structure of large or abstract data sets using visual representations that utilize the powerful processing capabilities of the human visual perceptual system. Information visualization is an exciting topic, and the last decade has witnessed the development of many interesting ideas about how to visualize abstract information.
In 1998 when I first taught this course, the field was very young, I knew every piece of work that had been done, and the course was a survey of the field. Now the field is very active and a survey a survey or a history of all information visualization techniques would not be feasible nor particularly enlightening.
This course will take a critical stance towards the field of information visualization. Rather than survey existing approaches, we will analyze the factors contribute to success or lack thereof, as a means to determine how to devise future successful visualizations. Criteria for success in this analysis are either positive results from usability studies or wide adoption by the target user population.
This course will also have a focus on how to present information clearly and effectively.
There are many related topics that this class will not address. These include: scientific visualization, cartography, computer graphics, and visualization as an artistic enterprise.
Class Meetings
Class meets on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:30am-12:00 in 202 South Hall. The format of the class will be a mix of lecturing, looking at visualizations, student presentations and in-class design and activities.
Grading
Grading will be 50% on assignments, readings, and in-class work and 50% on a final project. (See projects from last time for an idea of what they are like.)
Readings and Books
Readings will consist of two required books: Stephen Few's Information Dashboard Design, Tufte's The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, and a number of papers that will be accessible online or handed out in class. You can purchase these from the IMSA website.
You can also access Few's book for free on the UC Berkeley SafariU site, but there are a limited number of people who can look at any one book there at one time.
O'Reilly's Actionscript 3.0 Cookbook can be read online here.
O'Reilly's Essential Actionscript 3.0 is also good, but takes longer to get through. Access it online here.