English

TimeFlows: Visualizing Process Chronologies from Vast Collections of Heterogeneous Information Objects

Human-Computer Interaction 2024-05-06 v2 Computers and Society

Abstract

In many fact-finding investigations, notably parliamentary inquiries, process chronologies are created to reconstruct how a controversial policy or decision came into existence. Current approaches, like timelines, lack the expressiveness to represent the variety of relations in which historic events may link to the overall chronology. This obfuscates the nature of the interdependence among the events, and the texts from which they are distilled. Based on explorative interviews with expert analysts, we propose an extended, rich set of relationships. We describe how these can be visualized as TimeFlows. We provide an example of such a visualization by illustrating the Childcare Benefits Scandal -- an affair that deeply affected Dutch politics in recent years. This work extends the scope of existing process discovery research into the direction of unveiling non-repetitive processes from unstructured information objects.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2404.16051,
  title  = {TimeFlows: Visualizing Process Chronologies from Vast Collections of Heterogeneous Information Objects},
  author = {Max Lonysa Muller and Erik Saaman and Jan Martijn E. M. van der Werf and Charles Jeurgens and Hajo A. Reijers},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2404.16051},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

16 pages, accepted at RCIS 2024

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:05:21.576Z