IEEE VIS 2024 Content: DeLVE into Earth’s Past: A Visualization-Based Exhibit Deployed Across Multiple Museum Contexts

DeLVE into Earth’s Past: A Visualization-Based Exhibit Deployed Across Multiple Museum Contexts

Mara Solen - The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

Nigar Sultana - University of British Columbia , Vancouver, Canada

Laura A. Lukes - University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

Tamara Munzner - University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

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Room: Bayshore V

2024-10-17T16:00:00ZGMT-0600Change your timezone on the schedule page
2024-10-17T16:00:00Z
Exemplar figure, described by caption below
The DeLVE visualization software, displaying the dataset of past events in biological and geological history, as deployed at a biology museum. The data is visualized across multiple scales using our novel Connected Multi-Tier Ranges idiom.
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Keywords

Visualization, design study, museum, deep time.

Abstract

While previous work has found success in deploying visualizations as museum exhibits, it has not investigated whether museum context impacts visitor behaviour with these exhibits. We present an interactive Deep-time Literacy Visualization Exhibit (DeLVE) to help museum visitors understand deep time (lengths of extremely long geological processes) by improving proportional reasoning skills through comparison of different time periods. DeLVE uses a new visualization idiom, Connected Multi-Tier Ranges, to visualize curated datasets of past events across multiple scales of time, relating extreme scales with concrete scales that have more familiar magnitudes and units. Museum staff at three separate museums approved the deployment of DeLVE as a digital kiosk, and devoted time to curating a unique dataset in each of them. We collect data from two sources, an observational study and system trace logs. We discuss the importance of context: similar museum exhibits in different contexts were received very differently by visitors. We additionally discuss differences in our process from Sedlmair et al.'s design study methodology which is focused on design studies triggered by connection with collaborators rather than the discovery of a concept to communicate. Supplemental materials are available at: https://osf.io/z53dq/