Agreeing to Disagree: Students Negotiating Visual Ambiguity Through Scientific Argumentation

Author(s):  
Camillia Matuk
Science Scope ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 036 (09) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Mesa ◽  
Rose Pringle ◽  
Lynda Hayes

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helda Lupita Septyastuti ◽  
Sutrisno ◽  
Hayuni Retno Widarti

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muntholib Muntholib ◽  
Asmi’ Munadhiroh ◽  
Nur Candra Eka Setiawan ◽  
Yahmin Yahmin

Author(s):  
Donna Governor ◽  
Doug Lombardi ◽  
Catie Duffield

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muntholib Muntholib ◽  
Khusnul Hidayati ◽  
Laksmi Purnajanti ◽  
Yudhi Utomo ◽  
Hariyanto Hariyanto

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 205395172110184
Author(s):  
Tommaso Venturini ◽  
Mathieu Jacomy ◽  
Pablo Jensen

It is increasingly common in natural and social sciences to rely on network visualizations to explore relational datasets and illustrate findings. Such practices have been around long enough to prove that scholars find it useful to project networks in a two-dimensional space and to use their visual qualities as proxies for their topological features. Yet these practices remain based on intuition, and the foundations and limits of this type of exploration are still implicit. To fill this lack of formalization, this paper offers explicit documentation for the kind of visual network analysis encouraged by force-directed layouts. Using the example of a network of Jazz performers, band and record labels extracted from Wikipedia, the paper provides guidelines on how to make networks readable and how to interpret their visual features. It discusses how the inherent ambiguity of network visualizations can be exploited for exploratory data analysis. Acknowledging that vagueness is a feature of many relational datasets in the humanities and social sciences, the paper contends that visual ambiguity, if properly interpreted, can be an asset for the analysis. Finally, we propose two attempts to distinguish the ambiguity inherited from the represented phenomenon from the distortions coming from fitting a multidimensional object in a two-dimensional space. We discuss why these attempts are only partially successful, and we propose further steps towards a metric of spatialization quality.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document