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1995 IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization (InfoVis '95)
Case study: 3D displays of Internet traffic
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
October 30-October 31
ISBN: 0-8186-7201-3
K.C. Cox, AT&T Bell Labs., Naperville, IL, USA
S.G. Eick, AT&T Bell Labs., Naperville, IL, USA
The explosive growth in world-wide communications, especially the Internet, has highlighted the need for techniques to visualize network traffic. The traditional node and link network displays work well for small datasets but become visually cluttered and uninterpretable for large datasets. A natural 3D metaphor for displaying world-wide network data is to position the nodes on a globe and draw arcs between them coding the traffic. This technique has several advantages of over the traditional 2D displays, it naturally reduces line crossing clutter, provides an intuitive model for navigation and indication of time, and retains the geographic context. Coupling these strengths with some novel interaction techniques involving the globe surface translucency and arc heights illustrates the usefulness for this class of displays.
Index Terms:
Internet; data visualisation; telecommunication traffic; computer animation; stereo image processing; telecommunication computing; world-wide communications; Internet traffic; network traffic visualisation; 3D displays; large data sets; world-wide network data; line crossing clutter reduction; navigation; time indicator; geographic context; globe surface translucency; arc height
Citation:
K.C. Cox, S.G. Eick, "Case study: 3D displays of Internet traffic," ieee_infovis, pp.129, 1995 IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization (InfoVis '95), 1995
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