here - Fujishiro Lab

Transcription

here - Fujishiro Lab
Raiosha Map
1F
2F
① Registration
② Symposium Space
(PacificVAST/Keynotes/Papers/Vis Notes/Poster FF)
③ Faculty Lounge (Reception)
④ Conference Room L (Vis Notes/Lunches)
⑤ Gallery (Posters&Lunch, Coffee breaks)
Welcome to IEEE Pacific Visualization 2014!
Computer visualization is a very active research area of computer science,
and still continues its rapid growth, due to the power and value being proven
in diverse applications. IEEE Computer Society Visualization and Graphics
Technical Committee has served as the sponsor for the Pacific Visualization
Symposium, PacificVis, which had its debut in Kyoto in 2008, and is held
annually since then with a particular aim to draw more related researchers
and practitioners in the Asia-Pacific region. After the six successful symposia
in Kyoto (2008); Beijing (2009); Taipei (2010); Hong Kong (2011); Songdo
(2012); and Sydney (2013), PacificVis is back to Japan this year, organized by
Keio University, Faculty of Science and Technology, in cooperation with ACM
SIGGRAPH and Eurographics, and held at Hiyoshi Campus, Keio University,
Yokohama, from March 4th to 7th, 2014.
The four-day program starts with PacificVAST Workshop (2 sessions with
8 invited talks and panel discussion), and followed by three main days,
consisting of 2 keynotes; 8 sessions with 29 regular papers; 4 sessions
with 22 visualization notes (new category of short papers); and 25 poster
presentations, to encompass a broad spectrum of visualization R&D topics.
We hope all of you will enjoy the entire program of the symposium.
Issei Fujishiro (Keio University, Japan)
IEEE Pacific Visualization 2014
Symposium Chair
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Keynote 1
March 4 (Tue) 9:20-10:20
Expanding the Universe – From Volume Rendering to
High-Dimensional Data Visualization
Klaus Mueller
Computer Science Department
Stony Brook University and SUNY Korea
Abstract
When I began my research career, volume rendering was a hot topic. It
was invented in part because of great advances at another front – medical
imaging. These emerging modalities, such as X-ray Computed Tomography,
produced data that needed to be visualized in fully 3D and not just by
surfaces. During my PhD years and after I was working in both domains –
3D volume reconstruction from projection data produced by CT and the
visualization of these using volume rendering. Volume data were considered
‘big’ back then and their visualization ‘computationally expensive’.
Fortunately, another great advance came along – the birth of commodity
graphics hardware, now known as GPUs. First attempts to use these boards
for volume rendering were largely hacks – albeit very creative ones. But
eventually, driven by the strong market forces of computer games, both
hardware and API of GPUs became very flexible and one could soon render
even large volumes in amazing beauty, with complex special effects, and
at interactive speeds. So where to go from here – increase data size, add
more dimensions, make things more irregular? I decided to do it all and
ventured into the dark universe of high-dimensional data. There, I soon
was ‘cursed by high dimensionality’ and got lost in the maze of ‘redundant
subspaces’. But eventually I ‘illuminated my path’ and hopefully that of
others. On my journey I found that knowing volume rendering can be quite
helpful for understanding some of the issues that arise in high-dimensional
data visualization, for example, in sampling and rendering. In this talk I want
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to share my experiences and also present our software package ‘The NDScope’ which features some of the practical outcomes of the research I have
conducted along with my students in recent years.
Biography
Klaus Mueller received a PhD in computer science and an MS in Biomedical
Engineering, both from The Ohio State University. He is currently a professor
in the Computer Science Department at Stony Brook University and the
chair of the Computer Science Department at SUNY Korea, the first US
University on Korean soil. His current research interests are visual analytics,
computer graphics, medical imaging, and high-performance computing, He
won the US National Science Foundation CAREER award in 2001 and the
SUNY Chancellor Award for Excellence in Scholarship and Creative Activity
in 2011. Mueller has authored more than 160 peer-reviewed journal and
conference papers, which have been cited more than 5,000 times. He is a
frequent speaker at international conferences, has participated in numerous
tutorials on various topics, and is currently the chair of the IEEE Technical
Committee on Visualization and Computer Graphics. He was an associate
editor of IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics and is a
senior member of the IEEE. For more information, please see http://www.
cs.sunysb.edu/~mueller.
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Keynote 2
March 7 (Fri) 11:10-12:10
Comparative Visualization
Eduard Gröller
Vienna University of Technology
Abstract
Visualization uses computer-supported, interactive, visual representations
of (abstract) data to amplify cognition. In recent years data complexity and
variability has increased considerably. This is due to new data sources as well
as the availability of uncertainty, error and tolerance information. Instead
of individual objects entire sets, collections, and ensembles are visually
investigated. This raises the need for effective comparative visualization
approaches. Visual data science and computational sciences provide vast
amounts of digital variations of a phenomenon which can be explored
through superposition, juxtaposition and explicit difference encoding. A
few examples of comparative approaches coming from the various areas
of visualization, i.e., scientific visualization, information visualization and
visual analytics will be treated in more detail. Comparison and visualization
techniques are helpful to carry out parameter studies for the special
application area of non-destructive testing using 3D X-ray computed
tomography (3DCT). We discuss multi-image views and an edge explorer
for comparing and visualizing gray value slices and edges of several datasets
simultaneously. Visual steering supports decision making in the presence of
alternative scenarios. Multiple, related simulation runs are explored through
branching operations. To account for uncertain knowledge about the input
parameters, visual reasoning employs entire parameter distributions. This
can lead to an uncertainty-aware exploration of (continuous) parameter
spaces. VAICo, i.e., Visual Analysis for Image Comparison, depicts differences
and similarities in large sets of images. It preserves contextual information,
but also allows the user a detailed analysis of subtle variations. The
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approach identifies local changes and applies cluster analysis techniques to
embed them in a hierarchy. The results of this comparison process are then
presented in an interactive web application which enables users to rapidly
explore the space of differences and drill-down on particular features. Given
the amplified data variability, comparative visualization techniques are likely
to gain in importance in the future. Research challenges, directions, and
issues concerning this innovative area are sketched at the end of the talk.
Biography
Eduard Gröller (http://www.cg.tuwien.ac.at/staff/EduardGroeller.html)
is Professor at the Institute of Computer Graphics and Algorithms (ICGA),
Vienna University of Technology. In 1993 he received his PhD from the same
university. His research interests include computer graphics, visualization,
and visual computing. He is heading the visualization group at ICGA. The
group performs basic and applied research projects in all areas of visualization
(http://www.cg.tuwien.ac.at/research/vis/). Dr. Gröller has given lecture
series on visualization at various other universities (Tübingen, Graz, Praha,
Bahia Blanca, Magdeburg, Bergen). He is a scientific proponent and key
researcher of the VRVis research center (http://www.vrvis.at/) The center
performs applied research in visualization, rendering, and visual analysis. Dr.
Gröller is adjunct professor of computer science at the University of Bergen,
Norway (since 2005). He co-authored more than 220 scientific publications
and acted as a reviewer for numerous conferences and journals in the field.
He also has served and serves on various program and paper committees.
Examples include Computers & Graphics, IEEE Transactions on Visualization
and Graphics, EuroVis conference, IEEE Visualization conference, Eurographics
conference. He has been paper co-chair of Volume Graphics 2005, IEEE
Visualization 2005 and 2006, and Eurographics 2006. He has been co-chair
of the VisSym 1999 symposium, the Eurographics 2011 conference, and the
EuroVis 2012 conference. Dr. Gröller has been chief editor of the Journal
Computer Graphics Forum (http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/cgf) in
the period 2008-2011. He became a fellow of the Eurographics association
in 2009. Dr. Gröller is head of the working group on computer graphics of
the Austrian Computer Society and member of IEEE Computer Society, ACM
(Association of Computing Machinery), GI (Gesellschaft für Informatik), OCG
(Austrian Computer Society).
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Program
March 4 (Tue)
10:30-10:40
PacificVAST Opening
Symposium Space
Koji Koyamada (Kyoto University, Japan)
10:40-12:00
PacificVAST Session 1
Symposium Space
Chair: Seokhee Hong (University of Sydney, Australia)
• Application of Visual Analytics to Ocean Science: Case Studies
Daisuke Matsuoka, JAMSTEC
Fumiaki Araki, JAMSTEC
Yumi Yamashita, JAMSTEC
• Visual Analytics of Malignant Blood Flow for Medical Professionals
Takanobu Yagi, Waseda University
Takeharu Hoshi, EBM Corp.
Young Park, EBM Corp.
• Analytical Visualization of Large-Scale Data of 3D Cultural Objects
Satoshi Tanaka, Ritsumeikan University
• Agenda Setting In Policy-Making Using Visualization Techniques
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
Nobuyuki Kukimoto, Kyoto University
13:30-14:50
PacificVAST Session 2
Symposium Space
Chair: Kwan-Liu Ma (University of California, Davis, USA)
• Japanese behavior in Visual Analytics of Temporal Daily Life Data
Takayuku Itoh, Ochanomizu University
• Building a Useful Software Dependency Visualization System
Tim Dwyer, Monash University
• Visual Analysis of DTI Fiber Model Differences
Haidong Chen, Zhejiang University
Honghui Mei, Zhejiang University
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Zhen Liu, Hangzhou Dianzi Univeristy
Senxiang Yan, The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University
Wei Chen, Zhejiang University
• Visualization for Visual Analytics: Micro-Visualization, Abstraction,
and Physical Appeal
Ulrik Brandes, University of Konstanz
15:30-17:20 Collaboration Complex, 3rd Floor, CDF (Concurrent Design Facility)
PacificVAST Panel Discussion
Chair: Koji Koyamada (Kyoto University, Japan)
• Exploration of the Close Interplay of Advanced Visualization
Techniques and Sophisticated Visual Analytics Approaches
Ulrik Brandes, University of Konstanz
Wei Chen, Zhejiang University
Tim Dwyer, Monash University
Takayuku Itoh, Ochanomizu University
Miki Kioka, Kyoto University
Daisuke Matsuoka, JAMSTEC
Tetsuro Ogi, Keio University
Junichiro Sanui, Kanto Gakuin University
Satoshi Tanaka, Ritsumeikan University
Takanobu Yagi, Waseda University
17:20-17:30 Collaboration Complex, 3rd Floor, CDF (Concurrent Design Facility)
PacificVAST Closing
Thomas Ertl (University of Stuttgart, Germany)
17:45Reception
Faculty Lounge
Map
Collaboration Complex
(Kyosei-kan)
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March 5 (Wed)
9:00-9:20
Opening
Symposium Space
9:20-10:20
Keynote 1
Symposium Space
Chair: Arie Kaufman (Stony Brook University, USA)
• Expanding the Universe – From Volume Rendering to HighDimensional Data Visualization
Klaus Mueller, Stony Brook University and SUNY Korea
10:50-12:05
Full Papers Session 1: Patterns and Glyphs
Symposium Space
Chair: Hsiang-Yun Wu (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
• Exploring Curved Schematization
Arthur van Goethem, TU Eindhoven
Wouter Meulemans, TU Eindhoven
Bettina Speckmann, TU Eindhoven
Jo Wood, City University London
• FlowString: Partial Streamline Matching Using Shape Invariant
Similarity Measure for Exploratory Flow Visualization
Jun Tao, Michigan Technological University
Chaoli Wang, Michigan Technological University
Ching-Kuang Shene, Michigan Technological University
• Non-Overlapping Aggregated Multivariate Glyphs for Moving Objects
Roeland Scheepens, Eindhoven University of Technology
Huub van de Wetering, Eindhoven University of Technology
Jarke van Wijk, Eindhoven University of Technology
13:20-15:00
Full Papers Session 2: Flow Visualization
Symposium Space
Chair: Han-Wei Shen (Ohio State University, USA)
• FlowTour: An Automatic Guide for Exploring Internal Flow Features
Jun Ma, Michigan Technological University
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James Walker, Michigan Technological University
Chaoli Wang, Michigan Technological University
Scott Kuhl, Michigan Technological University
Ching-Kuang Shene, Michigan Technological University
• Scalable Lagrangian-based Attribute Space Projection for
Multivariate Unsteady Flow Data
Hanqi Guo, Peking University
Fan Hong, Peking University
Qingya Shu, Peking University
Jiang Zhang, Peking University
Jian Huang, University of Tennessee
Xiaoru Yuan, Peking University
• Moment Invariants for 2D Flow Fields Using Normalization
Roxana Bujack, Leipzig University
Ingrid Hotz, Zuse Institute Berlin
Gerik Scheuermann, Leipzig University
Eckhard Hitzer, International Christian University
• 2D Vector Field Simplification Based on Robustness
Primoz Skraba, Jozef Stefan Institute
Bei Wang, University of Utah
Guoning Chen, University of Houston
Paul Rosen, University of Utah
15:20-16:35
Symposium Space
Vis Notes Session 1: Graph and Security Visualization
Chair: Ye Zhao (Kent State University, USA)
CluE: An Algorithm for Expanding Clustered Graphs
Ragaad AlTarawneh, University of Kaiserslautern
Johannes Schultz, University of Kaiserslautern
Shah Rukh Humayoun, University of Kaiserslautern
• A New Type of Web Graph for Personalized Visualization
Shibli Saleheen, Swinburne University of Technology
Wei Lai, Swinburne University of Technology
• Boundary Labeling Methods for Dynamic Focus Regions
Niklas Heinsohn, Universität Tübingen
Andreas Gerasch, Universität Tübingen
Michael Kaufmann, Universität Tübingen
• Enhancing Layout and Interaction in Formal Concept Analysis
Tim Pattison, Defence Science and Technology Organisation
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Derek Weber, Defence Science and Technology Organisation
Aaron Ceglar, Defence Science and Technology Organisation
• Bridging the Gap of Network Management and Anomaly Detection
through Interactive Visualization
Tao Zhang, Central Michigan Univeristy
Qi Liao, Central Michigan Univeristy
Lei Shi, Chinese Academy of Sciences
• Visual Detection of Anomalies in DNS Query Log Data
Guihua Shan, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Yang Wang, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Maojin Xie, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Haopu Lv, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Xuebin Chi, Chinese Academy of Sciences
15:20-16:35
Conference Room L
Vis Notes Session 2: Large Scale Scientific Visualization
Chair: Masahiko Itoh (The University of Tokyo, JAPAN)
• Transfer Function Map
Hanqi Guo, Peking University
Wei Li, Peking University
Xiaoru Yuan, Peking University
• Application of Stochastic Point-based Rendering to Transparent
Visualization of Large-scale Laser-scanned Data of 3D Cultural Assets
Satoshi Tanaka, Ritsumeikan University
Makoto Uemura, Ritsumeikan University
Kyoko Hasegawa, Ritsumeikan University
Takehiko Kitagawa, Ritsumeikan University
Takahiro Yoshida, Ritsumeikan University
Asuka Sugiyama, Ritsumeikan University
Hiromi T. Tanaka, Ritsumeikan University
Atsushi Okamoto, Otemae University
Naohisa Sakamoto, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
• A Stochastic Approach for Rendering Multiple Irregular Volumes
Naohisa Sakamoto, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
• An alternative formulation of Lyapunov exponents for computing
Lagrangian coherent structures
Allen R. Sanderson, University of Utah
10
• 2-3-4 Combination for Parallel Compression on the K Computer
Chongke Bi, RIKEN
Kenji Ono, RIKEN
• Strategies for Fault-Tolerant Distributed Visualization
Alexandros Panagiotidis, University of Stuttgart
Guido Reina, University of Stuttgart
Thomas Ertl, University of Stuttgart
16:50-17:50
Vis Notes Session 3: Visual Analytics I
Symposium Space
Chair: Lei Shi (Chinese Academy of Sciences, China)
• Improving Visual Communication for EIT-based Lung Research
Christina Gillmann, University of Kaiserslautern
Peter Salz, University of Kaiserslautern
• Visualizing Time-Dependent Variables of Water Distribution Systems
Nazli Yonca Aydin, University of Kaiserslautern
Dirk Zeckzer, Leipzig University
Hans Hagen, University of Kaiserslauter
Theo Schmitt, University of Kaiserslautern
• Visual Analysis of Dynamic Protein Cavities and Binding Sites
Michael Krone, University of Stuttgart
Daniel Kauker, University of Stuttgart
Guido Reina, University of Stuttgart
Thomas Ertl, University of Stuttgart
• Visual Analysis of Habitat Suitability Index Model For Predicting the
Locations of Fishing Grounds
Takashi Uenaka, Kyoto University
Naohisa Sakamoto, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
• Visualization of Building Performance Simulation Results: State-ofThe-Art and Future Directions
Kathrin Häb, Technical University of Kaiserslautern
Stephanie Schweitzer, Technical University of Kaiserslautern
Diana Fernández Prieto, Technical University of Kaiserslautern
Eva Hagen, Technical University of Kaiserslautern
Daniel Engel, Technical University of Kaiserslautern
Michael Böttinger, German Climate Computing Center
Inga Scheler, Technical University of Kaiserslautern
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16:50-17:50
Vis Notes Session 4: Visual Analytics II
Conference Room L
Chair: Xiaoyang Mao (Univerisyt of Yamanashi, Japan)
• Traffic Origins: A Simple Visualization Technique to Support Traffic
Incident Analysis
Afian Anwar, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Till Nagel, University of Applied Sciences Potsdam
Carlo Ratti, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
• EmailMap: Visualizing Event Evolution and Contact Interaction within
Email Archives
Sheng-Jie Luo, National Taiwan University
Li-Ting Huang, National Taiwan University
Bing-Yu Chen, National Taiwan University
Han-Wei Shen, The Ohio State University
• A Total Variation Based Spiral Video Visualization Method
Yadong Wu, Southwest University of Science and Technology
Song Wang, Southwest University of Science and Technology
Shuiqiang Lin, Southwest University of Science and Technology
Yongguo Han, Southwest University of Science and Technology
• WeiboEvents: A Crowd Sourcing Weibo Visual Analytic System
Donghao Ren, Peking University
Xin Zhang, Peking University
Zhenhuang Wang, Peking University
Jing Li, Peking University
Xiaoru Yuan, Peking Unviersity
• Affective and Effective Visualisation: Communicating Science to NonExpert Users
Phillip Gough, The University of Sydney
Caitilin de Berigny Wall, The University of Sydney
Tomasz Bednarz, CSIRO
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March 6 (Thu)
9:00-10:40
Full Papers Session 3: Multidimensional Data
Symposium Space
Chair: Tim Dwyer (Monash University, Australia)
• An Edge-Bundling Layout for Interactive Parallel Coordinates
Gregorio Palmas, MPI Informatik, Saarbrücken
Myroslav Bachynskyi, MPI Informatik, Saarbrücken
Antti Oulasvirta, MPI Informatik, Saarbrücken
Hans-Peter Seidel, MPI Informatik, Saarbrücken
Tino Weinkauf, MPI Informatik, Saarbrücken
• Visual Signature of High-Dimensional Geometry in Parallel
Coordinates
Xiaoqi Yan, Nanyang Technological University
Chi-Fu Lai, Nanyang Technological University
Chi-Wing Fu, Nanyang Technological University
• ScagExplorer: Exploring Scatterplots by Their Scagnostics
Tuan Dang, University of Illinois at Chicago
Leland Wilkinson, University of Illinois at Chicago
• Using Entropy-Related Measures in Categorical Data Visualization
Jamal Alsakran, The University of Jordan
Xiaoke Huang, Kent State University
Ye Zhao, Kent State University
Jing Yang, University of North Carolina at Charlott
Karl Fast, Kent State University
11:10-12:25
Full Papers Session 4: Graphs/Networks
Symposium Space
Chair: Kazuo Misue (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
• Hierarchical Focus+Context Heterogeneous Network Visualization
Lei Shi, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Qi Liao, Central Michigan University
Hanghang Tong, The City University of New York
Yifan Hu, AT&T Labs Research
Yue Zhao, Tsinghua University
Chuang Lin, Tsinghua University
13
• Rebuilding KEGG Maps: Algorithms and Benefits
Andreas Gerasch, University of Tübingen
Michael Kaufmann, University of Tübingen
Oliver Kohlbacher, University of Tübingen
• Improved Optimal and Approximate Power Graph Compression for
Clearer Visualisation of Dense Graphs
Tim Dwyer, Monash University
Christopher Mears, Monash University
Kerri Morgan, Monash University
Todd Niven, Monash University
Kim Marriott, Monash University
Mark Wallace, Monash University
13:40-15:20
Symposium Space
Full Papers Session 5: Visual Knowledge Discovery
Chair: Chaoli Wang (Michigan Technological University, USA)
• Maps of Computer Science
Daniel Fried, University of Arizona
Stephen Kobourov, University of Arizona
• Let It Flow: a Static Method for Exploring Dynamic Graphs
Weiwei Cui, Microsoft Research Asia
Xiting Wang, Tsinghua University
Shixia Liu, Microsoft Research Asia
Nathalie Henry Riche, Microsoft Research
Tara M. Madhyastha, University of Washington
Kwan-Liu Ma, University of California, Davis
Baining Guo, Microsoft Research Asia
• Image Flows Visualization for Inter-Media Comparison
Masahiko Itoh, The University of Tokyo
Masashi Toyoda, The University of Tokyo
Cai-Zhi Zhu, National Institute of Informatics
Shin'ichi Satoh, National Institute of Informatics
Masaru Kitsuregawa, National Institute of Informatics
• Visualizing Hidden Themes of Taxi Movement with Semantic
Transformation
Ding Chu, Kent State University
David Sheets, Kent State University
Ye Zhao, Kent State University
Yingyu Wu, Kent State University
Jing Yang, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
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Maogong Zheng, Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technologies
George Chen, Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technologies
15:40-16:55
Full Papers Session 6: Tensor Visualization
Symposium Space
Chair: Wei Chen (Zhejiang University, China)
• Tensor Visualization Driven Mechanical Component Design
Andrea Kratz, Zuse Institute Berlin
Marc Schoeneich, Saarland University
Valentin Zobel, Leipzig University
Bernhard Burgeth, Saarland University
Gerik Scheuermann, Leipzig University
Ingrid Hotz, German Aerospace (DLR)
Markus Stommel, Saarland University
• FiberScout: An Interactive Tool for Exploring and Analyzing Fiber
Reinforced Polymers
Johannes Weissenböck, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria - Wels
Campus
Artem Amirkhanov, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria - Wels
Campus
Weimin Li, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria - Wels Campus
Andreas Reh, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria - Wels Campus
Alexander Amirkhanov, Ufa State Aviation Technical University
Eduard Gröller, Vienna University of Technology
Johann Kastner, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria - Wels Campus
Christoph Heinzl, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria - Wels Campus
• A Visual Analytics Approach to Study Anatomic Covariation
Max Hermann, Bonn University
Anja C. Schunke, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Ploen
Thomas Schultz, Bonn University
Reinhard Klein, Bonn University
17:00Banquet
Yakatabune (banquet on boat)
* Start getting on a bus after the symposium sessions, and leave the
symposium venue (Raiosha) at 17:30
15
March 7 (Fri)
9:00-10:40
Symposium Space
Full Papers Session 7: Geographic/Geospatial Visualization
Chair: Ivan Viola (Vienna University of Technology, Austria)
• A Mobile Visual Analytics Approach for Law Enforcement Situation
Awareness
Ahmad M. M. Razip, Purdue University
Abish Malik, Purdue University
Shehzad Afzal, Purdue University
Matthew Potrawski, Purdue University
Ross Maciejewski, Arizona State University
Yun Jang, Sejong University
Niklas Elmqvist, Purdue University
David S. Ebert, Purdue University
• Revisiting Crisis Maps with Geo-Temporal Tag Visualization
Hina Aman, University of Manitoba
Pourang Irani, University of Manitoba
Fereshteh Amini, University of Manitoba
• Embedding Temporal Display into Maps for Occlusion-Free
Visualization of Spatio-Temporal Data
Guodao Sun, Zhejiang University of Technology
Yang Liu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Wenbin Wu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Ronghua Liang, Zhejiang University of Technology
Huamin Qu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
• Visual Analysis of Movement Behavior using Web Data for Context
Enrichment
Robert Krueger, University of Stuttgart
Dennis Thom, University of Stuttgart
Thomas Ertl, University of Stuttgart
11:10-12:10
Keynote 2
Chair: Kwan-Liu Ma (University of California, Davis, USA)
• Comparative Visualization
Eduard Gröller, Vienna University of Technology
16
Symposium Space
14:30-16:10
Symposium Space
Full Papers Session 8: Data Manipulation and Exploration
Chair: Gerik Scheuermann (Leipzig University, Germany)
• Efficient Range Distribution Query for Visualizing Scientific Data
Abon Chaudhuri, The Ohio State University
Tzu-Hsuan Wei, The Ohio State University
Teng-Yok Lee, The Ohio State University
Han-Wei Shen, The Ohio State University
Tom Peterka, Argonne National Laboratory
• Multidimensional Projection with Radial Basis Function and Control
Points Selection
Elisa Amorim, University of Calgary
Emilio Vital Brazil, University of Calgary
Luis Gustavo Nonato, University of Sao Paulo
Faramarz Samavati, University of Calgary
Mario Costa Sousa, University of Calgary
• Manipulating Bilevel Feature Space for Category-Aware Image
Exploration
Kazuyo Mizuno, The University of Tokyo
Hsiang-Yun Wu, The University of Tokyo
Shigeo Takahashi, The University of Tokyo
• Color Tunneling: Interactive Exploration and Selection in Volumetric
Datasets
Christophe Hurter, Univeristy of Toulouse
Russ Taylor, University of Calgary
Sheelagh Carpendale, University of Calgary
Alex Telea, University of Groningen
16:10-16:40
Closing
Symposium Space
17
Poster Presentations
March 7 (Fri) 12:10-12:40
Poster Fast-Forward
Symposium Space
Chair: Satoshi Tanaka (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
[PS001] Visualizing Galaxies Formation with the PYMSES Code
Z. Georgette, Institut de recherche sur les lois fondamentales de
l'Univers
F. Bournaud, Institut de recherche sur les lois fondamentales de l'Univers
F. Renaud, Institut de recherche sur les lois fondamentales de l'Univers
[PS002] A Citation Network Visualization Applying Topic-Based Paper
Clustering
Rina Nakazawa, Ochanomizu University
Takayuki Itoh, Ochanomizu University
Takafumi Saito, Tokyo University of Agriculture Technology
[PS003] A Photomosaic Selection Technique for Photograph Browsing
Kiho Sakamoto, Ochanomizu UNiversity
Takayuki Itoh, Ochanomizu University
[PS004] EVOLVE: Explanatory Variables and Objective function Linked
Visualization Environment
Maki Kubota, Ochanomizu University
Takayuki Itoh, Ochanomizu University
Shigeru Obayashi, Tohoku University
Yuriko Takeshima, Tohoku University
[PS005] A Polyline-Based Visualization Technique for Tagged TimeVarying Data
Sayaka Yagi, Ochanomizu University
Yumiko Uchida, Ochanomizu University
Takayuki Itoh, Ochanomizu University
[PS006] Proposal of Interactive Clustering System Employing Groupingbased Pairwise Constraint Generation
Yasufumi Takama, Tokyo Metropolitan University
Ryosuke Miyake, Tokyo Metropolitan University
[PS007] Activity Visualization for Multiple Targets in a Video
Masahiro Toyoura, University of Yamanashi
Satoshi Nishiguchi, Osaka Institute of Technology
Xiaoyang Mao, University of Yamanashi
Masayuki Murakami, Kyoto University of Foreign Studies
18
[PS008] Descritive Grammar of Semantic Structures for Safe and
Efficient Editing Operation in Tabular Forms
Lina Zhang, Tokyo Gakugei University
Hiroyuki Aoki, eText Lab. Inc.
Yasuhiko Morimoto, Tokyo Gakugei University
Shoichi Nakamura, Fukushima University
Youzou Miyadera, Tokyo Gakugei University
[PS009] MicroEye: Visual Summary of Microblogsphere from the Eye of
Celebrities
Qingsong Liu, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Lei Shi, Chinese Academy of Sciences
[PS010] In-Situ Visualization of PIC Simulation
Nobuaki Ohno, University of Hyogo
Hiroaki Ohtani, National Institute for Fusion Science
[PS012] Visualizing the Structure of Great Speeches
Yu Sakamoto, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Tsuyoshi Murata, Tokyo Institute of Technology
[PS013] Virtual-reality Visualization of Equilibrium Plasmas in
Experimental Device
Hiroaki Ohtani, National Institute for Fusion Sciece
Yasuhiro Suzuki, National Institute for Fusion Sciece
Akira Kageyama, Kobe University
Nobuaki Ohno, University of Hyogo
Ryutaro Kanno, National Institute for Fusion Sciece
Seiji Ishiguro, National Institute for Fusion Sciece
Yuichi Tamura, Konan University
[PS014] On Aesthetics of User-Sketched Drawings of Symmetric Graphs
Wen-Lin Chen, National Chiao Tung University
Shun-Yu Jhong, National Chiao Tung University
Tatsuro Tominaga, National Chiao Tung University
Wan-Yu Liu, Aletheia University
Chun-Cheng Lin, National Chiao Tung University
[PS015] An Abstraction Model for Information Visualization on Ambient
Displays
Heesun Kim, KAIST
Kwangyun Wohn, KAIST
[PS016]Visual Analysis of FPS Gameplay Data: From Game Design to
Bug Fixes
Quan Li, NetEase, Inc.
Huamin Qu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
19
[PS017]Toward Effective Narrative Animation in Streaming Text
Visualization
Yang Chen, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Jing Yang, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Ye Zhao, Kent State University
[PS018]Ensemble-Averaged Visualization of the Water Mass
Distribution for the Northwestern Pacific Ocean near Japan
Kun Zhao, Kyoto University
Satoshi Nakada, Kyoto University
Naohisa Sakamoto, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
[PS019]Visualizing Cognitive Structures Using a Layered Graph Drawing
Yosuke Onou, Kyoto University
Nobuyuki Kukimoto, Kyoto University
Miki Kioka, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
[PS020]Translucent Visual Analysis of Large Scale 3D point Data
Generated by Particle Fluid Simulation of Tsunami Water
Kentaro Tanaka, Ritsumeikan University
Satoshi Tanaka, Ritsumeikan University
Kyoko Hasegawa, Ritsumeikan University
Kohei Murotani, The University of Tokyo
Seiichi Koshizuka, The University of Tokyo
[PS021]Visual Analytic System for Habitat Suitable Index Modeling of
Neon Flying Squid with Visualization Tequnique
Masashi Kushdia, Kyoto University
Takashi Uenaka, Kyoto University
Naohisa Sakamoto, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
[PS022]Surface Reconstruction of Plant Meristems
Marina Doherty, University of California, Davis
Nelson Max, University of California, Davis
[PS023]Adaptive Visualization of Large-Scale Blood Flow Using ParticleBased Rendering
Daichi Hara, Kyoto University
Naohisa Sakamoto, Kyoto University
Koji Koyamada, Kyoto University
Hideo Miyachi, Cybernet System
Kazuyasu Sugiyama, RIKEN
20
[PS024]HistoryPaper: Visual Summary of Particular Days Based on
Personal Web Browsing History
Chica Matsueda, Ochanomizu University
Takayuki Itoh, Ochanomizu University
[PS025]Visualizing Bag-of-Features Image Categorization using
Anchored Maps
Hsiang-Yun Wu, The University of Tokyo
Kazuyo Mizuno, The University of Tokyo
Yi Gao, The University of Tokyo
Kazuo Misue, University of Tsukuba
Shigeo Takahashi, The University of Tokyo
[PS026]Visual Anomaly Detection of Network Connections in a Personal
Computer
Hayate Goto, The University of Electro-Communications
Tetsuji Takada, The University of Electro-Communications
12:40-14:30
Posters & Lunch
Gallery
21
IEEE Pacific Visualization 2014 Committees
Symposium Chair
•Issei Fujishiro (Keio University, Japan)
Program Committee Co-Chairs
•Ulrik Brandes (Universität Konstanz, Germany)
•Hans Hagen (Technische Universität Kaiserslautern, Germany)
•Shigeo Takahashi (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
Visualization Notes Chair
•Xiaoru Yuan (Peking University, China)
PacificVAST Workshop Chair
•Koji Koyamada (Kyoto University, Japan)
Posters Co-Chairs
•Satoshi Tanaka (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
•Young J. Kim (Ewha Womans University, Korea)
•Bingfeng Zhou (Peking University, China)
Organizing Chair
•Takayuki Itoh (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
Publicity Chair
•Hsiang-Yun Wu (The University of Tokyo, Japan)
Financial Chair
•Yuriko Takeshima (Tohoku University, Japan)
Steering Committee
•Issei Fujishiro (Keio University, Japan)
•Seokhee Hong (University of Sydney, Australia)
•Arie Kaufman (Stony Brook University, USA)
•Kwan-Liu Ma (Chair) (University of California, Davis, USA)
•Huamin Qu (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China)
22
Program Committee
•Daniel Archambault (Swansea University, UK)
•Min Chen (University of Oxford, UK)
•Weiwei Cui (Microsoft Research Asia, China)
•Giuseppe Di Battista (Università Roma Tre, Italy)
•Christian Duncan (Quinnipiac University, USA)
•Tim Dwyer (Monash University, Australia)
•Peter Eades (The University of Sydney, Australia)
•Niklas Elmqvist (Purdue University, USA)
•Thomas Ertl (University of Stuttgart, Germany)
•Danny Holten (SynerScope B.V., The Netherlands)
•Hiroshi Hosobe (Hosei University, Japan)
•Yifan Hu (AT&T Labs Research, USA)
•Takayuki Itoh (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
•Yun Jang (Sejong University, South Korea)
•Jessie Kennedy (Napier University, UK)
•Karsten Klein (The University of Sydney, Australia)
•Stephen Kobourov (University of Arizona, USA)
•Koji Koyamada (Kyoto University, Japan)
•Giuseppe (Beppe) Liotta (Università degli Studi di Perugia, Italy)
•Xiaoyang Mao (University of Yamanashi, Japan)
•Michael McGuffin (Ecole de Technologie Superieure, Canada)
•Kazuo Misue (University of Tsukuba, Japan)
•Shin-ichiro Mori (University of Fukui, Japan)
•Vijay Natarajan (Indian Institute of Science, India)
•Martin Nöllenburg (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
•Stephen North (Graphviz, USA)
•Nathalie Henry Riche (Microsoft Research, USA)
•Timo Ropinski (Linköping University, Sweden)
•Falk Schreiber (Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany)
•Bettina Speckmann (Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, Netherlands)
•Chaoli Wang (Michigan Technological University, USA)
•Yu-Shuen Wang (National Chiao-Tung University, Taiwan)
•Yunhai Wang (Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, China)
•Thomas Wischgoll (Wright State University, USA)
•Hsu-Chun Yen (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
•Hongfeng Yu (University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA)
•Xiaoru Yuan (Peking University, China)
23
Visualization Notes Committee
•Daniel Archambault (Swansea University, UK)
•Rita Borgo (Swansea University, UK)
•Wei Chen (Zhejiang University, China)
•Weiwei Cui (Microsoft Research Asia, China)
•Christian Duncan (Quinnipiac University, USA)
•Thomas Ertl (University of Stuttgart, Germany)
•Yifan Hu (AT&T Labs Research, USA)
•Maolin Huang (University of Technology, Sydney)
•Takayuki Itoh (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
•Yun Jang (Sejong University, South Korea)
•Stephen Kobourov (University of Arizona, USA)
•Koji Koyamada (Kyoto University, Japan)
•Ronghua Liang (Zhejiang University of Technology, China)
•Chun-Cheng Lin (National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan)
•Aidong Lu (UNC Charlotte, USA)
•Xiaoyang Mao (University of Yamanashi, Japan)
•Shin-ichiro Mori (University of Fukui, Japan)
•Martin Nöllenburg (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
•Timo Ropinski (Linköping University, Sweden)
•Naohisa Sakamoto (Kyoto University, Japan)
•Guihua Shan (Computer Network Information Center, CAS, China)
•Falk Schreiber (Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Germany)
•Gary Tam (Swansea University, UK)
•Satoshi Tanaka (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
•Chaoli Wang (Michigan Technological University, USA)
•Yunhai Wang (Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, China)
•Thomas Wischgoll (Wright State University, USA)
•Li Xiao (IAPCM, China)
•Jing Yang (UNC Charlotte, USA)
•Hsu-Chun Yen (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
•Yi Chen (Beijing Technology and Business University, China)
•Ying Zhao (Central South University, China)
•Hongfeng Yu (University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA)
•Xiaoru Yuan (Peking University, China)
•Fan Zhang (Ohio State University, USA)
•Jiawan Zhang (Tianjin University, China)
•Bingfeng Zhou (Peking University, China)
24
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