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Engaging with (big) data visualizations: factors that affect engagement and resulting new definitions of effectiveness

Engaging with (big) data visualizations: factors that affect engagement and resulting new definitions of effectiveness
Engaging with (big) data visualizations: factors that affect engagement and resulting new definitions of effectiveness
As data become increasingly ubiquitous, so too do data visualisations, which are the main means through which non-experts get access to data. Most visualizations circulate and are shared online, and many of them are produced by Internet researchers. For these reasons, data visualization is an important object of study for Internet research. This paper proposes that Internet research should engage critically with data visualization, and it does so by focusing on how people engage with them. Drawing on qualitative, empirical research with users, in this paper we identify six factors that affect engagement, which we define as socio-cultural: subject matter; source/media location; beliefs and opinions; time; emotions; and confidence and skills. We argue that our findings have implications for how effectiveness is defined in relation to data visualizations: such definitions vary depending on how, by whom, where and for what purpose visualizations are encountered. Our research also suggests that research into visualization engagement can benefit from adopting qualitative approaches developed within media audience research.
1396-0466
Kennedy, Helen
d36ab149-2c2c-4798-b47a-f7b9db5ab83d
Hill, Rosemary
2811670f-8519-4802-9982-4871639fa8d7
Allen, William
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Kirk, Andy
40cf5422-4b99-42af-a76d-8847b93b7050
Kennedy, Helen
d36ab149-2c2c-4798-b47a-f7b9db5ab83d
Hill, Rosemary
2811670f-8519-4802-9982-4871639fa8d7
Allen, William
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Kirk, Andy
40cf5422-4b99-42af-a76d-8847b93b7050

Kennedy, Helen, Hill, Rosemary, Allen, William and Kirk, Andy (2016) Engaging with (big) data visualizations: factors that affect engagement and resulting new definitions of effectiveness. First Monday, 21 (11). (doi:10.5210/fm.v21i11.6389).

Record type: Article

Abstract

As data become increasingly ubiquitous, so too do data visualisations, which are the main means through which non-experts get access to data. Most visualizations circulate and are shared online, and many of them are produced by Internet researchers. For these reasons, data visualization is an important object of study for Internet research. This paper proposes that Internet research should engage critically with data visualization, and it does so by focusing on how people engage with them. Drawing on qualitative, empirical research with users, in this paper we identify six factors that affect engagement, which we define as socio-cultural: subject matter; source/media location; beliefs and opinions; time; emotions; and confidence and skills. We argue that our findings have implications for how effectiveness is defined in relation to data visualizations: such definitions vary depending on how, by whom, where and for what purpose visualizations are encountered. Our research also suggests that research into visualization engagement can benefit from adopting qualitative approaches developed within media audience research.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 November 2016
Published date: 7 November 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499788
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499788
ISSN: 1396-0466
PURE UUID: 06ab0da0-b937-401c-b548-cb4ef44cc47a
ORCID for William Allen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3185-1468

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2025 16:37
Last modified: 05 Apr 2025 02:13

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Contributors

Author: Helen Kennedy
Author: Rosemary Hill
Author: William Allen ORCID iD
Author: Andy Kirk

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