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Visualizing with Text uncovers the rich palette of text elements usable in visualizations from simple labels through to documents. Using a multidisciplinary research effort spanning across fields including visualization, typography, and cartography, it builds a solid foundation for the design space of text in visualization. The book illustrates many new kinds of visualizations, including microtext lines, skim formatting, and typographic sets that solve some of the shortcomings of well-known visualization techniques. Key features: More than 240 illustrations to aid inspiration of new visualizations Eight new approaches to data visualization leveraging text Quick reference guide for visualization with text Builds a solid foundation extending current visualization theory Bridges between visualization, typography, text analytics, and natural language processing The author website, including teaching exercises and interactive demos and code, can be found here. Designers, developers, and academics can use this book as a reference and inspiration for new approaches to visualization in any application that uses text.
Digital imaging is used widely in various real-life applications today. There are a number of potential digital imaging applications that include different areas such as television, photography, robotics, remote sensing, medical diagnosis, reconnaissance, architectural and engineering design, art, crime prevention, geographical information systems, communication, intellectual property, retail catalogs, nudity detection, face finding, industrial, and others. This book is specifically dedicated to digital imaging research, applications, techniques, tools, and algorithms that originate from different fields such as image processing, computer vision, pattern recognition, signal processing, artificial intelligence, intelligent systems, and soft computing. In general, this comprehensive book contains state-of-the-art chapters focusing on the latest developments using theories, methods, approaches, algorithms, analyses, display of images, visual information, and videos.
One of the books most central to late-antique religious life was the four-gospel codex, containing the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. A common feature in such manuscripts was a marginal cross-referencing system known as the Canon Tables. This reading aid was invented in the early fourth century by Eusebius of Caesarea and represented a milestone achievement both in the history of the book and in the scholarly study of the fourfold gospel. In this work, Matthew R. Crawford provides the first book-length treatment of the origins and use of the Canon Tables apparatus in any language. Part one begins by defining the Canon Tables as a paratextual device that orders the textual content ...
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This volume offers coverage of the 1999 international conference on information visualization. Topics include augmented and virtual reality, visualization in construction, computer-aided geometric design, design visualization, digital art, graphical modelling and applied visualization."
Annotation This proceedings of the July 2002 conference presents new developments in modeling tools for rendering abstract concepts. The 116 papers are arranged into sessions, such as collaborative information visualization environments, animation, curves, the semantic web, and applications in geography and medicine. Topics include a visual query language for large spatial databases, cooperative robot teleoperation through virtual reality interfaces, visualizing temporal features in large-scale microarray time series data, and using bibliographic maps to analyze term distribution in scientific papers. The CD-ROM is an electronic version of the book. No subject index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
Contents of these papers on computer graphics include: basic concepts and infrastructure for information visualization; viewing and selecting information; demonstrations; and applications of information visualization.
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