User-Guided Synthesis of Interactive Diagrams

Author(s):  
John Sarracino ◽  
Odaris Barrios-Arciga ◽  
Jasmine Zhu ◽  
Noah Marcus ◽  
Sorin Lerner ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Bert Bredeweg ◽  
Marco Kragten ◽  
Loek Spitz
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaitlyn Dutton ◽  
Mark C. Lipke

<p>Frost diagrams provide convenient illustrations of the aqueous reduction potentials and thermodynamic tendencies of different oxidation states of an element. Undergraduate textbooks often describe the lowest point on a Frost diagram as the most stable oxidation state of the element, but this interpretation is incorrect because the thermodynamic stability of each oxidation state depends on the specific redox conditions in solution (i.e., the potential applied by the environment or an electrode). Further confusion is caused by the widespread use of different, contradictory conventions for labeling the y-axis of these diagrams as either n<i>E</i>° or −n<i>E</i>°, among other possibilities. To aid in discussing and correcting these common mistakes, we introduce a series of interactive Frost diagrams that illustrate the conditional dependence of the relative stabilities of each oxidation state of an element. We include instructor’s notes for using these interactive diagrams and a written activity for students to complete using these diagrams.</p>


2005 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Ware ◽  
Robert Bobrow

For reasons of clarity, a typical node–link diagram statically displayed on paper or a computer screen contains fewer than 30 nodes. However, many problems would benefit if far more complex information could be diagrammed. Following Munzner et al., we suggest that with interactive diagrams this may be possible. We describe an interactive technique whereby a subset of a larger network diagram is highlighted by being set into oscillatory motion when a node is selected with a mouse. The subset is determined by a breadth first search of the underlying graph starting from the selected node. This technique is designed to support visual queries on moderately large node-link diagrams containing up to a few thousand nodes. An experimental evaluation was carried out with networks having 32, 100, 320, 1000, and 3200 nodes respectively, and with four highlighting techniques: static highlighting, motion highlighting, static+ motion highlighting, and none. The results show that the interactive highlighting methods support rapid visual queries of nodes in close topological proximity to one another, even for the largest diagrams tested. Without highlighting, error rates were high even for the smallest network that was evaluated. Motion highlighting and static highlighting were equally effective. A second experiment was carried out to evaluate methods for showing two subsets of a larger network simultaneously in such a way that both are clearly distinct. The specific task was to determine if the two subsets had nodes in common. The results showed that this task could be performed rapidly and with few errors if one subset was highlighted using motion and the other was highlighted using a static technique. We discuss the implications for information visualization.


2012 ◽  
Vol 11 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. S9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Domenico F Merlo ◽  
Rosangela Filiberti ◽  
Michael Kobernus ◽  
Alena Bartonova ◽  
Marija Gamulin ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 30 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 61-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Naftaliev ◽  
Michal Yerushalmy

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaitlyn Dutton ◽  
Mark C. Lipke

<p>Frost diagrams provide convenient illustrations of the aqueous reduction potentials and thermodynamic tendencies of different oxidation states of an element. Undergraduate textbooks often describe the lowest point on a Frost diagram as the most stable oxidation state of the element, but this interpretation is incorrect because the thermodynamic stability of each oxidation state depends on the specific redox conditions in solution (i.e., the potential applied by the environment or an electrode). Further confusion is caused by the widespread use of different, contradictory conventions for labeling the y-axis of these diagrams as either n<i>E</i>° or −n<i>E</i>°, among other possibilities. To aid in discussing and correcting these common mistakes, we introduce a series of interactive Frost diagrams that illustrate the conditional dependence of the relative stabilities of each oxidation state of an element. We include instructor’s notes for using these interactive diagrams and a written activity for students to complete using these diagrams.</p>


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