Theory is Shapes
Abstract
"Theory figures" are a staple of theoretical visualization research. Common shapes such as Cartesian planes and flowcharts can be used not only to explain conceptual contributions, but to think through and refine the contribution itself. Yet, theory figures tend to be limited to a set of standard shapes, limiting the creative and expressive potential of visualization theory. In this work, we explore how the shapes used in theory figures afford different understandings and explanations of their underlying phenomena. We speculate on the value of visualizing theories using more expressive configurations, such as icebergs, horseshoes, M\"obius strips, and BLT sandwiches. By reflecting on figure-making's generative role in the practice of theorizing, we conclude that theory is, in fact, shapes.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2510.01382,
title = {Theory is Shapes},
author = {Matthew Varona and Maryam Hedayati and Matthew Kay and Carolina Nobre},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2510.01382},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
Accepted at alt.vis 2025 workshop. 7 pages, 9 figures