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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Interactive Visual Analysis of Hypergraphs

Chen, ningrui January 2021 (has links)
Access to and understanding data plays an essential role in the increasingly digital world. Representation and analysis of relations between various data entities, i.e., graph and network structures in the data, is an important problem for various industries. In contrast to simple graphs that focus on edges with two endpoints only, a hypergraph provides a natural method to represent multi-way interactions with an arbitrary number of endpoints for each edge, and it can be a better alternative than a bipartite graph for comparable applications. However, traditional approaches for visually representing hypergraphs are purely static diagrams without support for interaction, which can be difficult to perceive and do not scale well with regard to the number of nodes and edges. They are not adequate for the representation and interactive exploration of large or dense hypergraph data sets found in real-world applications. The ISOVIS (Information and Software Visualisation) research group at Linnaeus University has previously introduced a novel radial visualization approach for undirected hypergraphs called Onion. The Onion tool focuses on solving the issues of edge clutter, overlaps, and edge crossings. However, certain open challenges and suggestions for improvements were identified for the respective implementation, and there is an opportunity to fill a gap in the hypergraph visualization research by building upon the original Onion approach study. In this thesis project, we implement the new version of the Onion approach based on the principles and challenges established previously. The contributions of this work include evidence regarding the effectiveness and efficiency of a hypergraph comparison technique, the usability of edge bundling in the context of hypergraph exploration tasks, and the scalability of the interactive visualization through an entirely new web-based version of the Onion approach. To obtain the respective results, the new implementation is applied for two case studies involving real-world data sets, and further validated through a user study with several participants. The results of this work can be helpful for researchers of network visualization and practitioners in need of approaches for representing and exploring data that can be modeled as hypergraphs.

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