English

Understanding the Research-Practice Gap in Visualization Design Guidelines

Human-Computer Interaction 2026-01-05 v3

Abstract

Although empirical research often underpins practical visualization guidelines, it remains unclear how well these research-driven insights are reflected in the guidelines practitioners actually use. In this paper, we investigate the research-practice gap in visualization design guidelines through a mixed-methods approach. We collected 390 design guidelines from practitioner-facing sources and 235 empirical studies to quantitatively assess their alignment. To complement this analysis, we conducted surveys with 69 participants (33 practitioners, 36 researchers) and in-depth interviews with 20 experts to examine their experiences, perceptions, and challenges. Our findings reveal discrepancies: empirical evidence often contradicts or only partially supports widely used guidelines, and the two communities prioritize different attributes of design. Based on these insights, we derive a holistic guideline template (integrating Context, Approach, Problem, and Purpose) and discuss actionable strategies, such as a triadic knowledge model.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2310.09614,
  title  = {Understanding the Research-Practice Gap in Visualization Design Guidelines},
  author = {Nam Wook Kim and Grace Myers and Jinhan Choi and Yoonsuh Cho and Changhoon Oh and Yea-Seul Kim},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2310.09614},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

17 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T12:50:42.485Z