Large-scale comparative visualisation of sets of multidimensional data
Abstract
We present encube a qualitative, quantitative and comparative visualisation and analysis system, with application to high-resolution, immersive three-dimensional environments and desktop displays. encube extends previous comparative visualisation systems by considering: 1) the integration of comparative visualisation and analysis into a unified system; 2) the documentation of the discovery process; and 3) an approach that enables scientists to continue the research process once back at their desktop. Our solution enables tablets, smartphones or laptops to be used as interaction units for manipulating, organising, and querying data. We highlight the modularity of encube, allowing additional functionalities to be included as required. Additionally, our approach supports a high level of collaboration within the physical environment. We show how our implementation of encube operates in a large-scale, hybrid visualisation and supercomputing environment using the CAVE2 at Monash University, and on a local desktop, making it a versatile solution. We discuss how our approach can help accelerate the discovery rate in a variety of research scenarios.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1610.00760,
title = {Large-scale comparative visualisation of sets of multidimensional data},
author = {Dany Vohl and David G. Barnes and Christopher J. Fluke and Govinda Poudel and Nellie Georgiou-Karistianis and Amr H. Hassan and Yuri Benovitski and Tsz Ho Wong and Owen Kaluza and Toan D. Nguyen and C. Paul Bonnington},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1610.00760},
year = {2016}
}
Comments
26 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in PeerJ Computer Science