Instructor |
Adj. Prof. Vladimir Skvortsov |
Phone |
032-626-1212 |
vlad at sunykorea.ac.kr or vladimir.skvortsov at stonybrook.edu (be sure to include ”[CSE332]” with no spaces, in the subject line of any e-mail message you send to me) |
|
Office |
Building B, room 409 |
Office Hours |
Tue, Thr 1:00-1:45 PM or by appointment. Office hours are only held when classes are in session. |
Calendar |
See the course syllabus for a list of textbooks, grading, a tentative schedule of topics, as well as the deadlines for all assignments |
Lectures |
See the academic calendar |
Course Information
This course is an introduction to both the foundations and applications of visualization and visual analytics, for the purpose of understanding complex data in science, medicine, business, finance, and many others. It will begin with the basics - visual perception, cognition, human- computer interaction, the sense-making process, data mining, computer graphics, and information vi- sualization. It will then move to discuss how these elementary techniques are coupled into an effective visual analytics pipeline that allows humans to interactively think with data and gain insight.
All course information (announcements, slides, homework, and grades) will be posted on Blackboard.
Objectives
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To develop an understanding of the data that are nowadays being collected in almost any domain – science, medicine, business, commerce, finance, social networks, and many more.
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To learn the basics – visual perception, cognition, human-computer interaction, the sense-making process, data mining, computer graphics, and information visualization.
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To gain the skills and project-based experience for using popular public-domain software tools in data analytics and interactive information visualization
Course Learning Outcomes:
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An ability to transform spatial and non-spatial data from science, medicine, commerce, etc. into interactive visual representations
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An understanding of the perceptual and cognitive reasoning processes that occur in humans when exploring visual artifacts derived from data to gain insight into the underlying phenomena
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Working knowledge of principles and methods in human-computer interaction, data mining, computer graphics, and information visualization as applied to visual sense-making and analytics
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Practical experience with a number of popular public-domain data analysis and visualization packages and libraries
Structure
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Two weekly sessions (each 75 minutes)
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1st session: lecture, practical exposition, discussion
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2nd session: lecture, practical
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Content
- Introduction - Issues - Representation - Presentation - Interaction - Design - Case Studies
Tools
RStudio → https://www.rstudio.com/
RStudio |
Shiny |
R Packages |
RStudio includes a code editor, debugging & visualization tools |
Shiny helps you make interactive web applications for visualizing data |
Developers created many packages to expand the features of R |
About your instructor
Vladimir Skvortsov has been a research assistant professor at the Computer Science Department of SUNY Korea University since March 2012. He received his Ph.D. in Robotics and Automation in 1997. Between 2002 and 2008, he worked as a research / software engineer in the SE (Samsung Electronics) / SAIT (Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology), Korea. In 2008 he worked as a web developer in Toronto, Canada. He spent the 2009-2010 years as a researcher at INRIA (Institut national de recherche en informatique et en automatique) Saclay Île-de-France centre, France. He has joined the CEWIT (Center of Excellence in Wireless and Information Technology) Korea since 2011.