8 research outputs found

    Visualization of 40 Years of Tropical Cyclone Positions and Their Rainfall

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    Correos de investigadores: [email protected] || [email protected] || [email protected] || [email protected] article focuses on a visualization of tropical cyclone track data occurring over a 40- year period (1970–2010) and their relationship with (extremely) heavy rainfall reported by 88 Central American weather stations. The purpose of the visualization is to associate the paths of tropical cyclones in oceanic areas with heavy rainfall inland. Thus, the potential for producing a set of rainfall patterns might somehow help in predicting where different impacts like flooding might occur when tropical cyclones develop in specific oceanic regions. The visualization will serve as a key tool for CIGEFI scientists to apply in their work to determine critical positions of the tropical cyclones associated with extremely heavy rainfall events at daily timescales.Universidad de Costa Rica/[805-B9-454]/UCR/Costa RicaUniversidad de Costa Rica/[805-C0-610]/UCR/Costa RicaUniversidad de Costa Rica/[EC-497]/UCR/Costa RicaUniversidad de Costa Rica/[805-A4-906]/UCR/Costa RicaUniversidad de Costa Rica/[805-C0-074]/UCR/Costa RicaUniversidad de Costa Rica/[805-A1-715]/UCR/Costa RicaUniversidad de Costa Rica/[805-B0-810]/UCR/Costa RicaUCR::Vicerrectoría de Investigación::Unidades de Investigación::Ciencias Básicas::Centro de Investigaciones Geofísicas (CIGEFI)UCR::Vicerrectoría de Docencia::Ciencias Básicas::Facultad de Ciencias::Escuela de FísicaUCR::Vicerrectoría de Investigación::Unidades de Investigación::Ciencias Básicas::Centro de Investigación en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología (CIMAR

    Visualizing uncertain tropical cyclone predictions using representative samples from ensembles of forecast tracks

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    This repository contains R codes and data for the analysis published in, 'Visualizing Uncertain Tropical Cyclone Predictions using Representative Samples from Ensembles of Forecast Tracks.' Additionally, this repository includes all of the stimuli used in the published study

    Multiple Hazard Uncertainty Visualization Challenges and Paths Forward

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    Making decisions with uncertainty is challenging for the general public, policymakers, and even highly trained scientists. Nevertheless, when faced with the need to respond to a potential hazard, people must make high-risk decisions with uncertainty. In some cases, people have to consider multiple hazards with various types of uncertainties. Multiple hazards can be interconnected by location, time, and/or environmental systems, and the hazards may interact, producing complex relationships among their associated uncertainties. The interaction between multiple hazards and their uncertainties can have nonlinear effects, where the resultant risk and uncertainty are greater than the sum of the risk and uncertainty associated with individual hazards. Effectively communicating the uncertainties related to such complicated systems should be a high priority because the frequency and variability of multiple hazard events due to climate change continue to increase. However, the communication of multiple hazard uncertainties and their interactions remains largely unexplored. The lack of practical guidance on conveying multiple hazard uncertainties is likely due in part to the field’s vast expanse, making it challenging to identify entry points. Here, we offer a perspective on three critical challenges related to uncertainty communication across various multiple hazard contexts to galvanize the research community. We advocate for systematic considerations of multiple hazard uncertainty communication that focus on trade-offs between complexity and factors, including mental effort, trust, and usability

    Does Updating Natural Hazard Maps to Reflect Best Practices Increase Viewer Comprehension of Risk?

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    In this study, we examine whether updating an interactive hazard map using recommendations from the literature improves user map comprehension. Analyses of experimental data collected from 75 university students revealed that map comprehension scores were not significantly better for those who viewed a “best practices” map compared to those who viewed an existing version. This may be because the existing map was itself better than most other interactive maps. Additionally, we found map comprehension levels to have significant positive relationships with objective tests, but not self-reported measures of spatial ability. Moreover, self-reported spatial ability had statistically significant, but only moderately strong, correlations with objective tests. These results indicate that spatial ability should be measured objectively rather than through self-reported methods in research on map comprehension. Further research is needed to examine the cognitive processes involved in hazard map comprehension, especially using a broader range of map characteristics and population segments with more diverse cognitive abilities

    Meaningful lines : Social semiotic investigations of the graphical line, used as a connector in digital data visualizations

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    The paper III is not published yet.The dissertation investigates the graphical line, used as a connector in digital data visualizations (DVs), from a social semiotic perspective. It explores the semiotic functions of connecting lines in digital DVs, building empirically on two corpus analyses. These analyses are concerned with how two key semiotic functions are graphically realized in the selected lines and whether graphical conventions regulating these realizations can be identified. In the dissertation the connecting line is researched as a central element of several different DV types – line graphs, timelines, route maps, connection maps, network diagrams, etc. Today, DVs are used in a broad range of social contexts and thus play an essential role in society. New digital technologies make it possible to apply other visual characteristics to graphical lines in DVs than was previously possible, for example, when they were hand-drawn or printed. This change may have influenced the DV design practice, a situation calling for updated research. The dissertation is article-based, comprising three articles and an extended abstract. The extended abstract frames the three articles and includes an introduction, definitions of key terms, more comprehensive sections on the theoretical framework, earlier research and methodology, as well as ethical considerations, reflections on methodological decisions and a conclusion. The two overall research questions addressed in the dissertation are: (1) What characterizes the graphical forms and semiotic functions of connecting lines in current, publicly available digital DVs? (2) What conventions, regulating the relations between these forms and functions, can be observed in such DVs?publishedVersio
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