3D in Visualization
Transcription
3D in Visualization
i247: Information Visualization and Presentation 3D in Visualization Cecilia Aragon Spring 2010 1 Acknowledgments • Slides by Marti Hearst 2 Today • 3D visualization – 3D in scientific visualization – Applying 3D to abstract data • The PARC Information Visualizer and follow-ons • 3D for data graphics – Navigating in 3D space – The debate: does 3D help? • Cognitive abilities and 3D • 3D vs 2D – Case Study: Helping Helicopter Pilots (scientific viz) 3 3D and Scientific Visualization • Visualizing information that is inherently 3D is a special case of infoviz – “Easier” in the sense that the 3D inherently makes sense – Still, you need to choose what to show and what not to show. • Images from https://graphics.llnl.gov/flow.html 4 Chimera (from UCSF) 5 3D for Abstract Information • Pioneering Work by Card and Robertson – Had state-of-the-art graphics hardware; wanted to see what happens when pushing the boundaries – Motivated by Card & Moran’s theories of cognitive architecture • • • • Information Visualizer (PARC, 1992) WebBook/Webforager (PARC, 1996) Data Mountain (MS Research, 1998) Task Gallery (MS Research, 2000) 6 Information Workspaces • Objective: – Decrease the costs for performing informationintensive tasks, or, alternatively, increase the scope of information that can be utilized for the same cost. • Method: – Large Workspaces – Make the immediate workspace virtually larger – Real-Time Interaction – Maximize the interaction rates – Visual Abstractions – Speed assimilation and pattern detection 8 7 Information Visualizer 17 8 research.microsoft.com/~ggr/gi97.ppt Web Forager http://research.microsoft.com/ui/TaskGallery/index.htm 24 9 Task Gallery (Robertson et al. 2000) 23 10 Data Mountain • Robertson, Czerwinski et al, 1998 • Follow-on to Information Visualizer • Organizing bookmarks using pile metaphor • Uses: – – – – Spatial organization 3D view with 2D interaction Cartoon animation details Subtle audio cues • Debate: – Is this better than 2D? 11 3D vs. 2D • Cockburn & McKenzie ’02 – Results for prior work with 3D systems are primarily negative for viz of things that are not inherently in 3D, but really results are mixed – Compared 2D, 2½D and 3D views of web page thumbnails – Did this for both physical and virtual interfaces – Compared sparse, medium, and dense displays 12 3D vs. 2D: Cockburn & McKenzie ’02 13 3D vs. 2D • Cockburn & McKenzie ’02 – Results: • Time taken sig. increased through 2D -> 3D interfaces • Subjective assessment sig. decreased 2D -> 3D • Performance degraded with denser problems • 3D virtual interface produced the slowest times • People prefered the physical interfaces • People were better at using their spatial memory than they expected to be • There was a problem with the physical 2½D display 14 The Role of Cognitive Abilities • Leitheiser & Munro ‘95 – Summarizes the results of earlier psychological research on spatial aptitiude – Also summarizes work on effects of spatial aptitude and UI use – Presents a study comparing a GUI with a command line interface, taking spatial abilities into account 15 The Role of Cognitive Abilities • Leitheiser & Munro ’95 • Hypotheses: – Users with high spatial ability would benefit more from the GUI than those with low spatial ability (H1) – Users with high verbal ability would perform better on command line interfaces (H2) • Tasks: – Obtain system time, list files, look up a file update time, open a subdirectory, move a file, copy a file, etc – Between subjects GUI (Mac) vs. Command line (DOS) • Findings: – H1 supported – H2 not supported – Everyone did better on the GUI • Low spatial ability users using the GUI required 90% of the time needed for command line interface 16 3D and Data Graphics • There have been lots of attempts to 3D-ify these • Results seemed mixed • Some modern versions of the ideas are here: – http://www.oculusinfo.com/demos.html – http://www.oculusinfo.com/softwareproducts.html 17 Interacting with 3D spaces • Path-drawing for 3D walkthrough, – Igarashi et al, UIST ’98 • Problem: interacting with 3D via 2D screens • Solution: be clever about how to convert 2D to 3D based on what the user is likely to intend 18 Creating in 3D Spaces • Teddy: A 3D Drawing System – Igarishi 1999 http://www-ui.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~takeo/video/teddy.avi http://www-ui.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~takeo/teddy/teddy/teddy.html 19 Other 3D Creation Tools • Lots of other great ideas from Igarashi’s lab: – http://www-ui.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/projects/index.html 20 Sequences of Steps vs 3D + Animation • Heiser, Phan, Agrawala, Tversky, Hanrahan ‘04 • Domain: assembly instructions • Identify – How people conceive of 3D assemblies – How people comprehend visual instructions • Validate – Build automated instruction design system – Evaluate usability of resulting instructions Slides from Heiser et al. 21 Ensure Visibility of Parts • • • • Show parts added in each step Show mode and location of attachment Avoid changing viewpoint Use physically stable orientation Slides from Heiser et al. 22 Illustrate Assembly Operations Structural diagrams Action diagrams • Use action diagrams rather than structural • Use arrows and guidelines to indicate attachment Slides from Heiser et al. 23 Improving Aviation Safety with Visualization • Aragon and Hearst, CHI 05 • Goal: reduce helicopter landing accidents caused by invisible air turbulence • Approach: use a new technology called lidar and try to visualize its output • Finding: it helped reduce simulated accidents (!) but only when the visualization was made as simple as possible. 24 Motivation • Invisible airflow hazards cause aircraft accidents – – – – – Wind shear Microbursts Vortices (turbulence) Downdrafts Hot exhaust plumes • Crash of Delta Flight 191 at DFW 1985 (microburst) • NTSB database 1989-99 – 21,380 aircraft accidents – 2,098 turbulence/wind related 25 Preliminary Usability Study 26 Preliminary usability study: goals • Assess efficacy of presenting airflow data in flight • Obtain expert feedback on presentation of sample hazard indicators to refine design choices 27 Usability study: low-fidelity prototype • Rhino3D (3D CAD modeling program) – Easy access to ship models, ease of rapid prototyping – Chosen over 2D paper prototype, MS Flight Simulator, WildTangent, VRML-based tools, Java and Flash • Series of animations simulating helicopter’s final approach to landing • Different types of hazard indicators • Get pilot feedback and suggestions (interactive prototyping) 28 Low-fi usability study screen shots 29 Low-fi usability study screen shots 30 Low-fi usability study participants • • • Navy helicopter test pilot, 2000 hours of flight time, 17 years experience Navy helicopter flight test engineer, 2000+ hours of simulator time, 100 hours of flight time, 17 years experience Civilian helicopter flight instructor, 1740 hours of flight time, 3 years experience 31 Low-fi usability study results • All participants said they would use system • Feedback on hazard indicators: – Color: all preferred red/yellow only – Transparency: should be visible enough to get attention, but must be able to see visual cues behind it – Depth cueing: all preferred shadows below object, #1 said shadows alone sufficient. #2 wanted connecting line. No one wanted tick marks or numeric info. – Texture: #1, #2 didn’t want. #3 suggested striping – Shape: Rectilinear and cloud shapes favored. Keep it simple! Watch for conflicting HUD symbology. 32 Flight Simulation Usability Study 33 Flight Simulation Usability Study • Implement visual hazard display system in simulator based on results from low-fidelity prototype • Advanced Rotorcraft Technology, Inc. in Mountain View, CA, USA – High-fidelity helicopter flight simulator – Accurate aerodynamic models • Use existing ship and helicopter models, flight test data • Simulated hazardous conditions, create scenarios, validated by Navy pilots and flight engineers 34 Flight Simulation Usability Study: Participants • 16 helicopter pilots – from all 5 branches of the military (Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, Marines) – civilian test pilots (NASA) – wide range of experience • 200 to 7,300 helicopter flight hours (median 2,250 hours) • 2 to 46 years of experience (median 13 years) • age 25 to 65 (median age 36) • No previous experience with airflow hazard visualization 35 Simulation Experiment Design • 4 x 4 x 2 within-subjects design (each pilot flew the same approaches) • 4 shipboard approach scenarios • 4 landing difficulty levels (US Navy Pilot Rating Scale - PRS 1-4) • Each scenario was flown at all difficulty levels both with and without hazard indicators • Orders of flight were varied to control for learning effects 36 Airflow Hazard Indicators in Simulator 37 Hypotheses 1. Crash rate will be reduced by the presence of hazard indicator (LD 3). 2. Crashes will be eliminated by red hazard indicator if a standard operating procedure (SOP) is given to the pilots (LD 4). 3. Hazard indicator will not cause distraction or degradation in performance in situations where adequate performance is expected without indicator (LD 2). 4. Pilots will say they would use airflow hazard visualization system 38 Hypothesis 1 confirmed Presence of the hazard indicator reduces the frequency of crashes during simulated shipboard helicopter landings (t-test for paired samples, t=2.39, df=63, p=0.00985). 19% --> 6.3% Landing Difficulty 3: Crash Rate vs. Presence of Hazard Indicator 0.25 Crash Rate 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00 Absent Present Hazard Indicator 39 Hypothesis 2 confirmed Presence of the red hazard indicator combined with appropriate instructions to the pilot prevents crashes (t=4.39, df=63, p < 0.000022). 23%->0% Landing Difficulty 4: Crash Rate vs. Presence of Hazard Indicator 0.35 Crash Rate 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00 Absent Present Hazard Indicator 40 Hypothesis 3 No negative effect of hazard indicator. 8%-->8% Landing Difficulty 2: Crash Rate vs. Presence of Hazard Indicator 0.12 Crash Rate 0.10 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 0.00 Absent Present Hazard Indicator 41 Hypothesis 3 (cont’d) Pilots believe hazard indicators were not distracting (Probe 6 results). 6. The airflow hazard visualization distracted me from the task of flying the aircraft. Number of responses 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Strongly Disagree Disagree Neither Agree Nor Disagree Agree Strongly Agree Pilot re sponse 6% Agre e , 94% Disagre e M e dian 2, Std De v 0.7 42 Hypothesis 4 confirmed Pilots would use the system (Probe 21 results). 21. I would use this display system if it were available on my aircraft. 9 Number of responses 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Strongly Disagree Disagree Neither Agree Nor Disagree Agree Strongly Agree Pilot response 81% Agree, 13% Disagree Median 4.5, Std Dev 1.0 43 Analysis by Pilot Experience Level • Same general trends -- but small sample size • No significant difference between the groups Crash Rate vs. Experience Level 0.25 0.2 Crash 0.15 Rate 0.1 0.05 0 Low Mod Hi LD 2/No LD 2/Haz LD 3/No LD 3/Haz LD 4/No LD 4/Haz Pilot Experience Level 44 Analysis of Subjective Data 94% found hazard indicators helpful Number of responses 18. The presence of the hazard indicators gave me more confidence as to the state of the winds and airwake on deck. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Strongly Disagree Disagree Neither Agree Nor Disagree Agree Strongly Agree Pilot response 94% Agree, 6% Disagree Median 4, Std Dev 1.0 45 Analysis of Subjective Data Is motion (animation) helpful or distracting? 14. It would be distracting if the hazard indicator showed airflow motion. Number of responses 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Strongly Disagree Disagree Neither Agree Nor Disagree Agree Strongly Agree Pilot response 31% Agree, 63% Disagree Median 2, Std Dev 1.1 46 Conclusions • Flight-deck visualization of airflow hazards yields a significant improvement in pilot ability to land safely under turbulent conditions in simulator • Type of visualization to improve operational safety much simpler than that required for analysis • Success of user-centered design procedure 47