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MAPPING-CYBERSPACE  January 2005

MAPPING-CYBERSPACE January 2005

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Subject:

Inf@Vis! num 160: Newsmap (fwd)

From:

martin dodge <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Mapping and visualising Internet infrastructure and Web space <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 18 Jan 2005 10:04:22 +0000

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TEXT/PLAIN

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Hi, an interesting overview of Marcos Weskamp's Newsmap visualisation in
current Inf@Vis! magazine.

I also wrote about the 'original' Newsmap system a few years back. This
was one of the most effective infovis examples I used. See
http://mappa.mundi.net/maps/maps_015/

cheers
martin



__________________________________________________________________________

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2005 23:53:58 +0100 (CET)
From: [log in to unmask]
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Inf@Vis! num 160: Newsmap


Inf@Vis!

The digital magazine of InfoVis.net.
[Number 160]

Newsmap
by Juan C. Dürsteler

Newsmap is an online application that uses the Treemap technology to visualise the Google news aggregator's most relevant news. It's now possible to get an idea of what's happening throughout the world at a glance.



See the graphical version of this issue at http://www.infovis.net/printMag.php?num=160&lang=2



Do you remember a website called newsmaps.com that disappeared around February 2002? Newsmaps was able to automatically organise collections of documents basing itself on the information that they contained. The result was visualised by means of a terrain map where the elevations corresponded to the most relevant words or items.



Newsmaps was based in a technology developed years before (http://www.pnl.gov/news/1995/nws95-07.htm) at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory  called ThemeScape. Newsmaps gathered the most important news and distributed them in an attractive “topographic” map that you could interactively explore. You could know what the world was talking about just at a glance.



Newsmaps, originally a product of Cartia.Inc, was acquired by Aurigin, that changed the name of the product to Aureka. Currently it's used by Micropatents (http://www.aurigin.com/static/advanced.htm) under the same name for exploring textual spaces built up of patents.



A similar idea was put in practice since march, 30, 2004 also with a similar name.



Newsmap (http://www.marumushi.com/apps/newsmap/newsmap.cfm) is an on-line application that presents the most relevant news of the moment, extracted from the Google news aggregator (http://news.google.com/). The technology that newsmap uses isn't other than the well known treemaps (see articles 51 http://www.infovis.net/printMag.php?num=51&lang=2 and 52 http://www.infovis.net/printMag.php?num=52&lang=2).



Newsmap visually codes each news using several visual variables.



* Colour: different news sections use different basic colours. For example, green is reserved for technology and blue for business. Most recent news exhibit brighter colours while older ones appear darker.



* Shape: each piece of news is shown within a rectangle, as is customary in treemaps.



* Size: The size of the rectangle is proportional to the relevance of the news.



* Finaly each news is expressed textually as a clearly legible headline, particularly if the news is important and recent. In that case characters are big, since the size of the rectangle allows for it, and the colour is saturated accordingly with the age of the news.



Newsmap retains another of the most searched for qualities in information visualisation, that is embracing the focus of our attention without losing the context (seeing both the forest and the trees simultaneously or, more technically speaking, focus + context).



On the other hand, it's possible to filter the news by country so that you can see the aggregate of all of them or just the result generated in one country, for example USA or any of the 10 countries present. It's also possible to filter the news by its typology, for example searching for technological news in all or only in some of the countries.



Newsmap, that has won the Netvision 2004 award of Ars Electronica (http://www.aec.at/en/prix/awards2004.asp) comes out from the efforts of Marcos Weskamp and Dan Albritton whose objective is “to simply demonstrate visually the relationships between data and the unseen patterns in news media. It is not thought to display an unbiased view of the news, on the contrary it is thought to ironically accentuate the bias of it” (see the explanation at the web http://www.marumushi.com/apps/newsmap/index.cfm).



Newsmaps and Newsmap are two attractive and possibly efficient ways (I don't know of any usability studies on them) of news visualisation or, for that matter, document visualisation. Their underlying technologies are well differentiated: ThemeScape and Treemaps, but the final result is a quick and intuitive exploration of the document space.



Newsmap is an example of the power of visualisation and shows how relatively simple technology can significantly contribute to easing the digestion of the cataract of information that falls on us daily.
__________________________________________________________
© J.C. Dürsteler 2000 - 2002,4  Barcelona, Spain.
All rights reserved

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