| Literature DB >> 24051789 |
Megan Monroe1, Rongjian Lan, Hanseung Lee, Catherine Plaisant, Ben Shneiderman.
Abstract
Electronic Health Records (EHRs) have emerged as a cost-effective data source for conducting medical research. The difficulty in using EHRs for research purposes, however, is that both patient selection and record analysis must be conducted across very large, and typically very noisy datasets. Our previous work introduced EventFlow, a visualization tool that transforms an entire dataset of temporal event records into an aggregated display, allowing researchers to analyze population-level patterns and trends. As datasets become larger and more varied, however, it becomes increasingly difficult to provide a succinct, summarizing display. This paper presents a series of user-driven data simplifications that allow researchers to pare event records down to their core elements. Furthermore, we present a novel metric for measuring visual complexity, and a language for codifying disjoint strategies into an overarching simplification framework. These simplifications were used by real-world researchers to gain new and valuable insights from initially overwhelming datasets.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24051789 DOI: 10.1109/TVCG.2013.200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph ISSN: 1077-2626 Impact factor: 4.579