Affiliation:
1. University of Konstanz , Department of Computer and Information Science , , Konstanz , Germany
Abstract
Abstract
The analysis of movement trajectories plays a central role in many application areas, such as traffic management, sports analysis, and collective behavior research, where large and complex trajectory data sets are routinely collected these days. While automated analysis methods are available to extract characteristics of trajectories such as statistics on the geometry, movement patterns, and locations that might be associated with important events, human inspection is still required to interpret the results, derive parameters for the analysis, compare trajectories and patterns, and to further interpret the impact factors that influence trajectory shapes and their underlying movement processes. Every step in the acquisition and analysis pipeline might introduce artifacts or alterate trajectory features, which might bias the human interpretation or confound the automated analysis. Thus, visualization methods as well as the visualizations themselves need to take into account the corresponding factors in order to allow sound interpretation without adding or removing important trajectory features or putting a large strain on the analyst. In this paper, we provide an overview of the challenges arising in robust trajectory visualization tasks. We then discuss several methods that contribute to improved visualizations. In particular, we present practical algorithms for simplifying trajectory sets that take semantic and uncertainty information directly into account. Furthermore, we describe a complementary approach that allows to visualize the uncertainty along with the trajectories.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Reference43 articles.
1. Daniel Weiskopf. Uncertainty visualization: Concepts, methods, and applications in biological data visualization. Frontiers in Bioinformatics, 2, 2022.
2. Jock Mackinlay. Automating the design of graphical presentations of relational information. ACM Trans. Graph., 5(2):110–141, 1986.
3. Matteo Zago, Matteo Luzzago, Tommaso Marangoni, Mariolino De Cecco, Marco Tarabini, and Manuela Galli. 3d tracking of human motion using visual skeletonization and stereoscopic vision. Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology, 8, 2020.
4. Manuel Stein, Halldor Janetzko, Andreas Lamprecht, Thorsten Breitkreutz, Philipp Zimmermann, Bastian Goldlücke, Tobias Schreck, Gennady Andrienko, Michael Grossniklaus, and Daniel A. Keim. Bring it to the pitch: Combining video and movement data to enhance team sport analysis. IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, 24(1):13–22, 2018.
5. M Schroeck, R Shockley, J Smart, Dolores Romero Morales, and P Tufano. Analytics: the real-world use of big data: How innovative enterprises extract value from uncertain data, executive report. 2012.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献