[Air-L] Call for chapters: Human centric visualizat​ion

Sandra Braman braman at uwm.edu
Sun Feb 12 01:13:19 PST 2012


   For all of you experts in visual communication, and in "effects"
   research . . . .   Sandra
   -------- Original Message --------

    Subject: Call for chapters: Human centric visualization
       Date: Sun, 12 Feb 2012 08:00:37 +1100
       From: Tony Huang [1]<Tony.Huang at CSIRO.AU>
   Reply-To: [2]Tony.Huang at CSIRO.AU
         To: [3]CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS at LISTSERV.ACM.ORG

Dear Colleagues,
Apologies for the spam. Please consider contributing and help to circulate. Than
k you!

******* CALL FOR CHAPTERS  ************
Proposal due:        Feb 24, 2012
Notification due:    March 09, 2012
Full chapter due:   June 15, 2012
Human centric visualization: Theories, methodologies and case studies
A book edited by Tony Huang (CSIRO ICT Centre, Australia), to be published by Sp
ringer: [4]www.springer.com
Web: [5]http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=19780%A9ownerid
=14065

1. Introduction
Visualizations (diagrams) are produced for people to make sense or interact with
 them. Rapid advances in display technology and computer power have enabled rese
archers to produce visually appealing pictures or compelling visual environments
 to end users. However, the effectiveness of those pictures in conveying embedde
d information to the users and impact of visual environments on humans have not
been fully understood.
This book addresses issues related to design, evaluation and application of visu
alizations from a human centric perspective. This cutting-edge book is an edited
 volume whose contributors include experts worldwide, from diverse disciplines i
ncluding psychologist, artists, engineers and scientists.
Academics, students, engineers and consultants will find this book useful for bo
th research and engineering purposes.

2. Recommended topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
Part I: Introduction and overview
Current status and future challenges of visualization methods
Current status and future challenges of human centric visualizations research
Survey of evaluation methods in visualization
Survey of theories, frameworks, models, heuristics and design principles for vis
ualization

Part II: Theories, models, frameworks, heuristics and design principles for huma
n centric visualization
Theories of visual thinking, diagram perception, cognition and reasoning and the
ir applications
Latest developments toward theories of visualization
Latest development of frameworks, models, heuristics and design principles for v
isualization
Applications of the theories, frameworks, models, heuristics and design principl
es
Adaptations and applications of theories from other domains in visualization

Part III: Methodologies for design, development and evaluation of human centric
visualization
Approaches and practices of visualization design
Evaluation methods
Measurement metrics
Taxonomies of tasks
Design and evaluation frameworks
Development and validation of methodologies
Application of methodologies
Lessons learned and experience obtained in developing and applying methodologies

Part IV: Case studies of human centric visualization
Human factors (e.g., memory, cognitive ability, gender, individual differences)
Visual perception and cognition
Visual analytics
Social, cultural aspects of visualization
Implications of new technologies (e.g., displays, new media) on humans
User experience
Implications of interactive methods on humans
Implications of new visualizations on humans
Roles of human in collaborative visualization
Use of visualizations for decision making, learning, business, software engineer
ing, science, security, biology, design, construction, cartography, etc.
Visualization in virtual reality/mixed reality/augmented reality
Case studies and evaluations of interfaces, systems and prototypes of visualizat
ions
Lessons learned and experience obtained in evaluating and designing visualizatio
ns
.........

3. International editorial advisory board
Margaret Burnett, Oregon State University, USA
Chaomei Chen, Drexel University, USA
Philip Cox, Dalhousie University, Canada
Mary Czerwinski, Microsoft Research, USA
Joe Goldberg, Oracle, USA
John Howse, University of Brighton, UK
Maolin Huang, University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Andreas Kerren, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Christof Körner, University of Graz, Austria
David Laidlaw, Brown University, USA
Giuseppe Liotta, University of Perugia, Italy
Ric Lowe, Curtin University, Australia
Kim Marriott, Monash University, Australia
Helen Purchase, University of Glasgow, UK
Mary Beth Rosson, Penn State University, USA
Jack van Wijk, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands

4. Important dates
Proposal due:  February 24, 2012  (Proposal has no length limits, usually should
 include motivations, method, contributions and a brief outline of the full chap
ter)
Notification: March 09, 2012
Full chapter due: June 15, 2012
Full manuscript due to publisher: August 1, 2012
Book publication: October 1, 2012

5. Contact
All submissions and inquiries should be sent to:
Tony Huang
CSIRO ICT Center, Australia
Email: [6]whua5569 at gmail.com[7]<mailto:whua5569 at gmail.com>


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References

   1. mailto:Tony.Huang at CSIRO.AU
   2. mailto:Tony.Huang at CSIRO.AU
   3. mailto:CHI-ANNOUNCEMENTS at LISTSERV.ACM.ORG
   4. http://www.springer.com/
   5. http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=19780%A9ownerid=14065
   6. mailto:whua5569 at gmail.com
   7. mailto:whua5569 at gmail.com
   8. mailto:chi-announcements-unsubscribe-request at listserv.acm.org
   9. http://listserv.acm.org/



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