368 research outputs found
What Do We Actually Learn from Evaluations in the "Heroic Era" of Visualization?
We often point to the relative increase in the amount and sophistication of
evaluations of visualization systems versus the earliest days of the field as
evidence that we are maturing as a field. I am not so convinced. In particular,
I feel that evaluations of visualizations, as they are ordinarily performed in
the field or asked for by reviewers, fail to tell us very much that is useful
or transferable about visualization systems, regardless of the statistical
rigor or ecological validity of the evaluation. Through a series of thought
experiments, I show how our current conceptions of visualization evaluations
can be incomplete, capricious, or useless for the goal of furthering the field,
more in line with the "heroic age" of medical science than the rigorous
evidence-based field we might aspire to be. I conclude by suggesting that our
models for designing evaluations, and our priorities as a field, should be
revisited
Troubling Ambition of Federal Rule of Evidence 502(d), The
Federal Rule of Evidence 502 promised to change American litigation for the better. It was heralded as a solution to the gross inequity and spiraling litigation costs associated with the painstaking, cumbersome, and largely wasteful document reviews necessary to protect the attorney-client privilege. And in some measure, it succeeded. It has brought uniformity, predictability, and equity to issues of inadvertent disclosure and subject matter waiver. But a largely overlooked provision of the rule promises even bigger, and more troubling changes. Federal Rule of Evidence 502(d) authorizes district courts to enter discovery orders protecting parties from the waiver consequences normally attached to sharing privileged materials. This new power, however, was not meaningfully circumscribed by Congress. Instead, Rule 502(d)\u27s plain language appears to authorize everything from court sanctioned “claw back” and “quick peek” agreements to wholesale voluntary disclosures. What is more, once a district court authorizes a disclosure, subsequent parties and even state courts are bound by the district court\u27s decision. This Article examines the development and early application of Rule 502(d) as well as its underlying rationale in an effort to address some of the potential benefits and consequences attendant to such a far-reaching – even paradigm changing – evidentiary rule. It finds that, while the new rule could promote more efficient litigation, Rule 502(d) orders may ultimately bring about little in the way of cost savings, erode the attorney-client privilege, and further complicate modern discovery practice
Are We Making Progress In Visualization Research?
In this work, I use a survey of senior visualization researchers and thinkers
to ideate about the notion of progress in visualization research: how are we
growing as a field, what are we building towards, and are our existing methods
sufficient to get us there? My respondents discussed several potential
challenges for visualization research in terms of knowledge formation: a lack
of rigor in the methods used, a lack of applicability to actual communities of
practice, and a lack of theoretical structures that incorporate everything that
happens to people and to data both before and after the few seconds when a
viewer looks at a value in a chart. Orienting the field around progress (if
such a thing is even desirable, which is another point of contention) I believe
will require drastic re-conceptions of what the field is, what it values, and
how it is taught
Is There a Doctor in the (Station) House?: Reassessing the Constitutionality of Compelled DWI Blood Draws Forty-Five Years After Schmerber
The vast majority of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence of the last century has been dedicated to parsing the physical and in- tangible boundaries of the home, developing the expectation of privacy, and, as of late, exploring the constitutional implica- tions of an increasingly electronic society. In the midst of this development, one major area has quietly fallen by the wayside - the preservation of bodily integrity. As technology has ren- dered the human body an ever-increasing source of crucial evi- dence, the Supreme Court has remained largely silent on the government\u27s power to harvest information through medical procedures. Since the Court\u27s consideration of the constitutio- nality of compelled blood draws in Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757 (1966), the Fourth Amendment questions atten- dant to bodily evidence have been largely left to the states. This Article examines a narrow subset of that state-level develop- ment: non-consensual DWI blood draws. A review of the state statutory and jurisprudential applications of Schmerber reveals increasing disagreement over the scope of the Fourth Amend- ment when police seek to recover fleeting evidence of blood al- cohol content. Based on this review, this Article suggests a number ofpolicy proposals designed to better insure police stay within the Fourth Amendment strictures of Schmerber while al- so procuring the most effective evidence possible
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The economics of corn on corn
This article discusses some of the important factors to consider when contemplating corn on corn. Only the factors that apply to the individual producer will be discussed. There are a number of environmental and societal costs and benefits that are important; however, space does not permit going into that discussion here. The biggest factor in comparing the different rotations is the yield differences. Research has shown that there is a yield drag of approximately 5 to 15 percent for second-year corn relative to first-year corn. This yield difference varies by soil and location. The yield penalty is most prevalent in bad weather years
When the Body Became Data: Historical Data Cultures and Anatomical Illustration
With changing attitudes around knowledge, medicine, art, and technology, the
human body has become a source of information and, ultimately, shareable and
analyzable data. Centuries of illustrations and visualizations of the body
occur within particular historical, social, and political contexts. These
contexts are enmeshed in different so-called data cultures: ways that data,
knowledge, and information are conceptualized and collected, structured and
shared. In this work, we explore how information about the body was collected
as well as the circulation, impact, and persuasive force of the resulting
images. We show how mindfulness of data cultural influences remain crucial for
today's designers, researchers, and consumers of visualizations. We conclude
with a call for the field to reflect on how visualizations are not timeless and
contextless mirrors on objective data, but as much a product of our time and
place as the visualizations of the past
OSCAR: A Semantic-based Data Binning Approach
Binning is applied to categorize data values or to see distributions of data.
Existing binning algorithms often rely on statistical properties of data.
However, there are semantic considerations for selecting appropriate binning
schemes. Surveys, for instance, gather respondent data for demographic-related
questions such as age, salary, number of employees, etc., that are bucketed
into defined semantic categories. In this paper, we leverage common semantic
categories from survey data and Tableau Public visualizations to identify a set
of semantic binning categories. We employ these semantic binning categories in
OSCAR: a method for automatically selecting bins based on the inferred semantic
type of the field. We conducted a crowdsourced study with 120 participants to
better understand user preferences for bins generated by OSCAR vs. binning
provided in Tableau. We find that maps and histograms using binned values
generated by OSCAR are preferred by users as compared to binning schemes based
purely on the statistical properties of the data.Comment: 5 pages (4 pages text + 1 page references), 3 figure
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