Abstract

Periodic, wave-like modifications of 2D shape contours are often applied to convey quantitative data via images. However, to the best of our knowledge, there has been no in-depth investigation of the perceptual uniformity and legibility of these kind of approaches. In this paper, we design and perform a user study to evaluate the perception of periodic contour modifications related to their geometry and colour. Based on the study results, we statistically derive a perceptual model, which demonstrates a mainly linear stimulus-to-perception relationship for geometric and colour amplitude and a close-to-quadratic relationship for the respective frequencies, with a rather negligible dependency on the waveform. Furthermore, analyzing the distribution of perceived magnitudes and the overlapping of the respective 50% confidence intervals, we extract distinguishable, visually equidistant quantization levels for each contour-related visual variable. Moreover, we give first insights into the perceptual dependency between amplitude and frequency, and propose a scheme for transferring our model to glyphs with different size, which preserves the distinguishability and the visual equidistance. This work is seen as a first step towards a comprehensive understanding of the perception of periodic contour modifications in image-based visualizations.

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