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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Useful junk?: the effects of visual embellishment on comprehension and memorability of charts

TLDR
It is found that people's accuracy in describing the embellished charts was no worse than for plain charts, and that their recall after a two-to-three-week gap was significantly better, questioning some of the premises of the minimalist approach to chart design.
Abstract
Guidelines for designing information charts (such as bar charts) often state that the presentation should reduce or remove 'chart junk' - visual embellishments that are not essential to understanding the data. In contrast, some popular chart designers wrap the presented data in detailed and elaborate imagery, raising the questions of whether this imagery is really as detrimental to understanding as has been proposed, and whether the visual embellishment may have other benefits. To investigate these issues, we conducted an experiment that compared embellished charts with plain ones, and measured both interpretation accuracy and long-term recall. We found that people's accuracy in describing the embellished charts was no worse than for plain charts, and that their recall after a two-to-three-week gap was significantly better. Although we are cautious about recommending that all charts be produced in this style, our results question some of the premises of the minimalist approach to chart design.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

What Makes a Visualization Memorable

TL;DR: The largest scale visualization study to date, using 2,070 single-panel visualizations, suggests that quantifying memorability is a general metric of the utility of information, an essential step towards determining how to design effective visualizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visualization Rhetoric: Framing Effects in Narrative Visualization

TL;DR: It is described how designers and researchers can benefit from the potentially positive aspects of visualization rhetoric in designing engaging, layered narrative visualizations and how the framework can shed light on how a visualization design prioritizes specific interpretations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Storytelling: The Next Step for Visualization

Robert Kosara, +1 more
- 01 May 2013 - 
TL;DR: Presentation-specifically, its use of elements from storytelling-is the next logical step in visualization research and should be a focus of at least equal importance with exploration and analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond Memorability: Visualization Recognition and Recall

TL;DR: It is shown that visualizations memorable “at-a-glance” are also capable of effectively conveying the message of the visualization, and thus, a memorable visualization is often also an effective one.
Journal ArticleDOI

SketchStory: Telling More Engaging Stories with Data through Freeform Sketching

TL;DR: SketchStory is presented, a data-enabled digital whiteboard that facilitates the creation of personalized and expressive data charts quickly and easily and allows the presenter to move and resize the completed data charts with touch, and filter the underlying data to facilitate interactive exploration.
References
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Book

The Visual Display of Quantitative Information

TL;DR: The visual display of quantitative information is shown in the form of icons and symbols in order to facilitate the interpretation of data.
Book

Information Visualization: Perception for Design

TL;DR: The art and science of why the authors see objects the way they do are explored, and the author presents the key principles at work for a wide range of applications--resulting in visualization of improved clarity, utility, and persuasiveness.
Journal ArticleDOI

The visual display of quantitative information

TL;DR: Med sin høye kompetanse innen informasjonsgrafikk blir Edward Tufte i dag sett på som en av de fremste pioneerene innen faget, og han har blitt tildelt over 40 priser for sine verker.
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