Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

January 6, 2014

Linking Visualization and Understanding in Astronomy

Filed under: Astroinformatics,Visualization — Patrick Durusau @ 8:03 pm

Linking Visualization and Understanding in Astronomy by Alyssa Goodman.

Abstract:

In 1610, when Galileo pointed his small telescope at Jupiter, he drew sketches to record what he saw. After just a few nights of observing, he understood his sketches to be showing moons orbiting Jupiter. It was the visualization of Galileo’s observations that led to his understanding of a clearly Sun-centered solar system, and to the revolution this understanding then caused. Similar stories can be found throughout the history of Astronomy, but visualization has never been so essential as it is today, when we find ourselves blessed with a larger wealth and diversity of data, per astronomer, than ever in the past. In this talk, I will focus on how modern tools for interactive “linked-view” visualization can be used to gain insight. Linked views, which dynamically update all open graphical displays of a data set (e.g. multiple graphs, tables and/or images) in response to user selection, are particularly important in dealing with so-called “high-dimensional data.” These dimensions need not be spatial, even though, e.g. in the case of radio spectral-line cubes or optical IFU data), they often are. Instead, “dimensions” should be thought of as any measured attribute of an observation or a simulation (e.g. time, intensity, velocity, temperature, etc.). The best linked-view visualization tools allow users to explore relationships amongst all the dimensions of their data, and to weave statistical and algorithmic approaches into the visualization process in real time. Particular tools and services will be highlighted in this talk, including: Glue (glueviz.org), the ADS All Sky Survey (adsass.org), WorldWide Telescope (worldwidetelescope.org), yt (yt-project.org), d3po (d3po.org), and a host of tools that can be interconnected via the SAMP message-passing architecture. The talk will conclude with a discussion of future challenges, including the need to educate astronomers about the value of visualization and its relationship to astrostatistics, and the need for new technologies to enable humans to interact more effectively with large, high-dimensional data sets.

Extensive list of links mentioned in the talk along with other resources follows the abstract.

Slides from the keynote (90MB) are available now.

Video of the keynote should be posted by tomorrow.

There are differences between disciplines, vocabularies differ, techniques differ, data practices vary, but they all share the common task of making sense of the data they collect.

Watching other disciplines may be one of the better ways to get ahead in your own.

Not to mention the slides really rock on a night when it is too cold to venture out!

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