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(Fall 2010)
(Summer 2012. Social Network Analysis.)
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* '''October 10:''' Shrinivasan, Y. B., & van Wijk, J. J. (2008, April). [http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1357247 Supporting the analytical reasoning process in information visualization]. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems (pp. 1237-1246). ACM.
 
* '''October 10:''' Shrinivasan, Y. B., & van Wijk, J. J. (2008, April). [http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1357247 Supporting the analytical reasoning process in information visualization]. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems (pp. 1237-1246). ACM.
  
===Summer 2012.  Social Network Analysis.===
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===Summer 2012.  Social Network Analysis===
 
From this term we will be giving flavors to the reading group by having term-themes. We of course invite every kind of discussion and we can certainly accomodate more readings inspired by the common topic being covered. That said, during this summer the following sub-topics would shape the discussion:
 
From this term we will be giving flavors to the reading group by having term-themes. We of course invite every kind of discussion and we can certainly accomodate more readings inspired by the common topic being covered. That said, during this summer the following sub-topics would shape the discussion:
  

Revision as of 00:06, 5 November 2014

Reading Group

We are an informal reading group that meets once a week to discuss papers related to Visual Analytics, Information Visualization, and HCI in general.

Time: Tuesdays at 3:30PM

Location: Room 2746 at SFU Surrey

Discussed Papers

Fall 2014: Text Analytics

VAST Challenge 2014

Winter 2014: Collaborative Synthesis

Fall 2013: Branching and Subjuncts

Summer 2012. Social Network Analysis

From this term we will be giving flavors to the reading group by having term-themes. We of course invite every kind of discussion and we can certainly accomodate more readings inspired by the common topic being covered. That said, during this summer the following sub-topics would shape the discussion:

  • Background: What is social network analysis? What are the dominant theories? What are the characteristics of the raw data? How do researchers make sense of, and draw conclusions from, the data they collect on social networks? What types of techniques are available? Compare two analysis techniques.
  • Visualization: Why are VA tools so useful for social network analysis? What are the standard visual representation techniques (layout, encoding, etc.)? What are the alternatives to node-link diagrams? Compare two new approaches/tools.
  • Interaction: What are the standard interaction techniques for static social network analysis/exploration? How have designers dealt with temporal dynamics? Compare two new approaches/tools.
  • Evaluation: How are social network analysis visual analytics tools evaluated? What does 'success' look like in this domain? Compare two evaluation papers.

Summer 2011

Spring 2011

Fall 2010

Summer 2010

  • May 4: F. Viégas, S.Golder, J. Donath “Visualizing Email Content: Portraying Relationships from Conversational Histories”, CHI 2006

Spring 2010