StreamExplorer: A Multi-Stage System for
Visually Exploring Events in Social Streams

IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics

Yingcai Wu1      Zhutian Chen*2      Guodao Sun3      Xiao Xie*1      Nan Cao4      Shixia Liu5      Weiwei Cui6     
Authors associated with * were the students supervised by Yingcai Wu when this work was done.
1State Key Lab of CAD & CG, Zhejiang University      2Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
3Zhejiang University of Technology      4Tongji University      5Tsinghua University      6Microsoft Research, Beijing     

Teaser Image
Teaser Image

User interface of StreamExplorer: a timeline visualization with the combination of (a) a visual tree of aging subevents and (b) a line chart of recent subevents; (c)-(e) three topic maps with a set of interactive lenses; (f) a panel for choosing interactive lenses; (g) options of time units.

Abstract

Analyzing social streams is important for many applications, such as crisis management. However, the considerable diversity, increasing volume, and high dynamics of social streams of large events continue to be significant challenges that must be overcome to ensure effective exploration. We propose a novel framework by which to handle complex social streams on a budget PC. This framework features two components: 1) an online method to detect important time periods (i.e., subevents), and 2) a tailored GPU-assisted Self-Organizing Map (SOM) method, which clusters the tweets of subevents stably and efficiently. Based on the framework, we present StreamExplorer to facilitate the visual analysis, tracking, and comparison of a social stream at three levels. At a macroscopic level, StreamExplorer uses a new glyph-based timeline visualization, which presents a quick multi-faceted overview of the ebb and flow of a social stream. At a mesoscopic level, a map visualization is employed to visually summarize the social stream from either a topical or geographical aspect. At a microscopic level, users can employ interactive lenses to visually examine and explore the social stream from different perspectives. Two case studies and a task-based evaluation are used to demonstrate the effectiveness and usefulness of StreamExplorer.

Paper

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Acknowledgements

The work was supported by National 973 Program of China (2015CB352503), NSFC (U1609217, 61502416, 61602409), the Fundamental Research Funds for Central Universities (2016QNA5014), and the 100 Talents Program of Zhejiang University.

Copyright © 2017 by Yingcai Wu. All rights reserved