Result: A Typology of Decision-Making Tasks for Visualization

Title:
A Typology of Decision-Making Tasks for Visualization
Source:
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. 31:8536-8551
Publication Status:
Preprint
Publisher Information:
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2025.
Publication Year:
2025
Document Type:
Academic journal Article
ISSN:
2160-9306
1077-2626
DOI:
10.1109/tvcg.2025.3572842
DOI:
10.48550/arxiv.2404.08812
Rights:
IEEE Copyright
CC BY
Accession Number:
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7bd1ca191d5232228a4b778e201400b
Database:
OpenAIRE

Further Information

Despite decision-making being a vital goal of data visualization, little work has been done to differentiate decision-making tasks within the field. While visualization task taxonomies and typologies exist, they often focus on more granular analytical tasks that are too low-level to describe large complex decisions, which can make it difficult to reason about and design decision-support tools. In this paper, we contribute a typology of decision-making tasks that were iteratively refined from a list of design goals distilled from a literature review. Our typology is concise and consists of only three tasks: CHOOSE, ACTIVATE, and CREATE. Although decision types originating in other disciplines exist, we provide definitions for these tasks that are suitable for the visualization community. Our proposed typology offers two benefits. First, the ability to compose and hierarchically organize the tasks enables flexible and clear descriptions of decisions with varying levels of complexities. Second, the typology encourages productive discourse between visualization designers and domain experts by abstracting the intricacies of data, thereby promoting clarity and rigorous analysis of decision-making processes. We demonstrate the benefits of our typology through four case studies, and present an evaluation of the typology from semi-structured interviews with experienced members of the visualization community who have contributed to developing or publishing decision support systems for domain experts. Our interviewees used our typology to delineate the decision-making processes supported by their systems, demonstrating its descriptive capacity and effectiveness. Finally, we present preliminary findings on the usefulness of our typology for visualization design.