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Martin Dodge - cybergeography

Information Mapping. Martin Dodge - www.cybergeography.org Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London. / Content Summit 01, Zurich Switzerland, 9 th November 2001 /. how do we navigate content?. how we really navigate online content.

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Martin Dodge - cybergeography

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  1. Information Mapping Martin Dodge - www.cybergeography.org Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London / Content Summit 01, Zurich Switzerland, 9th November 2001 /

  2. how do we navigate content?

  3. how we really navigate online content..

  4. Navigating content – not quite Hollywood • improving ways to navigate online content • is there a middle ground between current textual / list type interfaces versus the immersive 3d (cool) interfaces of Hollywood? • from feedback received, it seems like many people are seeking better navigation tools and interfaces • experience from cartography can help • examine the potential of information mapping The map is a help provided to the imagination through the eyes. Henri Abraham Chatelain, Atlas Historique (1705)

  5. Navigational activities • much information seeking is haphazard, ill-defined. May not know exactly what you are looking for. Iterative and fluid. Exploration. Scanning – covering a large area quickly and without depth Browsing – following an undirected path by associations until you find something of interest Searching – looking for an explicit target Exploring – finding out the full extent and diversity of what is available Wandering – random and unstructured movementwithout purpose

  6. The power of maps • maps have been powerful visual interfaces for understanding the World for several 1000 years • maps have been key in framing our understanding places, their size, shape and the relations between them • ‘what is where’ and ‘how to get there’ • revealing what is hidden. Making the invisible visible • maps have been vital for navigating unknown territory • I’m a geographer, so I believe maps enjoy a privileged position over other descriptive tools

  7. Information maps – the ‘classics’ Charles Minard’s ‘Napoleon’ map, from 1861 London Tube map, based on the design Of Harry Beck in 1930s John Snow’s ‘Cholera’ Map, 1854

  8. Information Maps • information maps for content navigation • wide variety of ‘experiments’ / products • visual metaphors • dimension (2D, 2.5D, 3D) • static - dynamic • levels of user interactivity • scales of maps • individual site maps • dynamic surf maps / trail maps / history visualization • large chunks of information space • focus on interactive 2d space-filling information maps

  9. The power of information maps • the missing ‘up button’ on the browser • intelligent summarisation and generalisation • 3 key advantages: • a sense of the whole (the birds eye view / big picture). What is there around here? • revealing hidden connections / structure • support interactive browsing Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge that we have lost in information. T.S. Elliot, The Rock (1934)

  10. Making information maps • Spatialisation – turning content into maps • various algorithms • Key spatial properties: • area • position • proximity • Scale + the graphic properties of colour, shape, labeling, etc

  11. time popularity Area (size) Position (x,y) Proximity (distance) Scale (more detail)

  12. HCIL / Ben Shneiderman’s Treemaps http://www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/treemaps/

  13. University of Arizona AI Lab’s ET-Map http://ai2.bpa.arizona.edu/ent/

  14. ODP – typical hierarchical directory of websites

  15. Antarctica Systems’ Visual Net : Map.net demo http://www.map.net/

  16. Zooming into the Cantons

  17. Zooming in deeper … Zurich

  18. WebMap Technologies – InternetMap http://www.webmap.com/

  19. Cartia’s ThemeScape – NewsMaps demo

  20. SmartMoney.com – Map of the Market http://www.smartmoney.com/marketmap/

  21. A little digression – the work of Martin Wattenberg http://historywired.si.edu/ http://rhizome.org/spiral http://rhizome.org/spiral

  22. Social Maps - What are people talking about? Netscan project by Marc Smith, Microsoft Research http://netscan.research.microsoft.com/

  23. books

  24. Music

  25. TV

  26. And of course Sex (the alt.sex newsgroups)

  27. Conclusions • can we make information maps? • Yes • can we make really useful information maps? - probably, but maybe not yet • how helpful are the current maps in navigating online content? • are the maps just eye candy? • the ‘killer map’ is yet to be drawn • I want the London Tube map for the Web • potential developments • surf maps integrated into the browser • search engine result maps

  28. Conclusions • major usability issues, need evaluation • many people have trouble reading maps • need very clear metaphors • easy modes of interaction and support • interesting in themselves. Maps as art? • concern for privacy issues. Maps are often used to monitor, track and control • there is no one definitive map • all maps maps distort, all maps deceive – some are deliberate, some are unintentional

  29. Distortion and deception“how to lie with maps” • most obvious being through • data selection/omission • projections • how are maps of information content deceiving? • many ways to project content onto a flat map Mark Monmonier, How to lie with maps (Chicago University Press, 1996)

  30. questions ?? I would welcome feedback, email me at m.dodge@ucl.ac.uk • the slides of this presentation are available at www.casa.ucl.ac.uk/martin/content_summit • keep in touch, join the cybergeography news bulletin - www.cybergeography.org/register.html www.atlasofcyberspace.com published by Addison Wesley, August 2001 [ Shameless plug for some dead-tree content! ]

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