Lecture - 8 and 9 - Data Visualization
Lecture - 8 and 9 - Data Visualization
To help:
Explore
Calculate
Communicate
Decorate
Two Different Primary
Goals:
Two Different
Explore/Calculate
Types of Viz
Analyze
Reason
about
Information
Communicate
Explain
Make
Goals of Information Visualization
More specifically, visualization should:
Graphical elements
facilitate comparisons via
length shape
orientation
texture
Animation shows changes across time
Color helps make distinctions
Aesthetics make the process appealing
The Need for Critical Analysis
• We see many creative ideas, but they often fail
in
practice
• Graphs
• Maps
• Diagrams
Types of Symbolic
• Displays
Graphs
– at least two scales required
– ǀ alues assoĐiated ďLJ a sLJŵŵetriĐ
͞paired ǁ i th͟ relatioŶ
• Examples: scatter-plot, bar-chart, layer-graph
Types of Symbolic
ChartsDisplays
– discrete relations among discrete
entities
– structure relates entities to one another
– lines and relative position serve as links
Examples:
family tree
flow chart
network diagram
Types of Symbolic
• Displays
Maps
– internal relations determined (in part) by
the spatial relations of what is pictured
– labels paired with locations
Examples:
map of census data
topographic maps
From www.thehighsierra.com
Types of Symbolic
Diagrams
Displays
– schematic pictures of objects or entities
– parts are symbolic (unlike photographs)
• how-to illustrations
• figures in a manual
Anatomy of a Graph (Kosslyn 89)
• Framework
– sets the stage
– kinds of measurements, scale, ...
• Content
– marks
– poiŶt sLJŵďols, liŶes, areas, ďars,
…
• Labels
– title, axes, tic marks, ...
Basic Types of Data
• Nominal (qualitative)
– (no inherent order)
– city names, types of diseases, ...
• Ordinal (qualitative)
– (ordered, but not at measurable
intervals)
– first, seĐoŶd, third, …
– cold, warm, hot
• Interval (quantitative)
Common Graph
Types
length of page
# of accesses
# of accesses
url 1
url 2
url 3
url 4
url 5
url 6
url 7
iu m
t
# of accesses
days
length of page
Scatter
Plots
• Qualitatively determine if variables
– are highly correlated
• linear mapping between horizontal & vertical
axes
– have low correlation
• spherical, rectangular, or irregular distributions
– have a nonlinear relationship
• a curvature in the pattern of plotted points
• Place points of interest in context
When to use which
• Linetype?
graph
– x-axis requires quantitative variable
– Variables have contiguous values
– familiar/conventional ordering among ordinals
• Bar graph
– comparison of relative point values
• Scatter plot
– convey overall impression of relationship between
two variables
• Pie Chart?
– Emphasizing differences in proportion among a few
numbers
BI Dashboard
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BI Dashboard
• A business intelligence dashboard is a data
visualization tool that displays the current status of
metrics and key performance indicators (KPIs) for
an enterprise.
• Dashboards consolidate and arrange numbers,
metrics and performance scorecards on a
single screen.
• The essential features of a BI dashboard product
include a customizable interface and the ability to
pull real-time data from multiple sources.
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What are BI
dashboards?
Visualizations Metrics
Key Characteristics of a Dashboard:
• All the visualizations fit on a single computer screen
— scrolling to see more violates the definition of a
dashboard.
• It shows the most important performance
indicators / measures to be monitored.
• Interactivity such as filtering and drill-down can be
used in a dashboard.
• It is not designed exclusively for executives but
rather should be used by the general workforce as
effective dashboards are easy to understand and
use.
• The displayed data automatically updated without 32
What is
•
Infocube?
Infocube is data storage area in which we
maintain data which we are extracting from
source system physically.
• An InfoCube can function as both a data target
and
an InfoProvider.
• From a reporting point of view, an Infocube can
be described as a self-contained dataset.
• For example, a Sales Amount Infocube which has
dimensions like MONTH – PRODUCT-CUSTOMER-REGION,
can be viewed by any of the axes, for example total sales by
region or by customer. The dimensions of an Info-Cube are 33
Example…
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The
End
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