Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2011
DOI: 10.1145/1978942.1979233
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Temporal distortion for animated transitions

Abstract: Animated transitions are popular in many visual applications but they can be difficult to follow, especially when many objects move at the same time. One informal design guideline for creating effective animated transitions has long been the use of slow-in/slow-out pacing, but no empirical data exist to support this practice. We remedy this by studying object tracking performance under different conditions of temporal distortion, i.e., constant speed transitions, slow-in/slow-out, fast-in/fast-out, and an adap… Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…Other researchers have found benefits in animation for different domains such as tree visualization [2], common statistical graphs [20], and hierarchies [43]. These and other uses and studies of animation in information visualization (e.g., [16,14,23,22]) inspire and inform the animations available in our tool.…”
Section: Animationmentioning
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Other researchers have found benefits in animation for different domains such as tree visualization [2], common statistical graphs [20], and hierarchies [43]. These and other uses and studies of animation in information visualization (e.g., [16,14,23,22]) inspire and inform the animations available in our tool.…”
Section: Animationmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…To facilitate seeing the relationship between the original and transmogrified space we incorporate animation, which has previously been shown to be successful in supporting comprehension during transformation in infovis (e.g., [43,14,20,2]). …”
Section: Animationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are many possible designs for animations, and with a few exceptions [15,24], there exist very little empirical research comparing the effectiveness of different types of designs. A better understanding of good animated transition design is particularly important for interactive information visualization applications, where the analyst needs to constantly navigate between different views of the same data.…”
Section: Animated Transitionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These quick animated transitions employ a slow-out effect [38] and allow users to rapidly compare different layouts for a given graph. A second type of animated transition is slower and uses linear pacing [38], which facilitates detailed graph comparison and makes it possible for users to follow individual nodes.…”
Section: Explorementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second type of animated transition is slower and uses linear pacing [38], which facilitates detailed graph comparison and makes it possible for users to follow individual nodes.…”
Section: Explorementioning
confidence: 99%