Lecture Visualization, Summer Semester 2015

Content

The students will be taught the basics in the areas of Information Visualization (INFOVIS) and Scientific Visualization (SCIVIS). The different techniques in the context of the visualization pipeline are covered, which serves as a red thread for the course. The main focus is on interactive visualization techniques that allows the user for example to interact with the visualizations in order to filter the data being displayed or to change display parameters. The course covers the following topics:

  • Overview
  • The visualization pipeline
  • Data structures for spatial data 
  • Visualization of scalar, vector and tensor fields
  • Visualization of multi-parametric data
  • Glyph based techniques
  • Key aspects of visual perception
  • Applications of modern visualization systems

Goals

To become familiar with the basic concepts and algorithms used in the field of visualization. The students should be able to visualize abstract and spatial data in a way that enhances our perception of the desired relationships in the underlying data. In addition, the students should be able to implement a wide range of visualization techniques in existing frameworks or even to design and implement them from the ground up.

Labs

Supervisors:

Robin Skanberg
Julian Kreiser

Tutors:

Peter Bendel

Classification

  • Informatik, B.Sc., Schwerpunkt
  • Informatik, M.Sc., Kernfach Praktische und Angewandte Informatik
  • Medieninformatik, B.Sc., Schwerpunkt
  • Medieninformatik, M.Sc., Kernfach Mediale Informatik
  • Software-Engineering, B.Sc., Schwerpunkt
  • Software-Engineering, M.Sc., Kernfach Praktische und Angewandte Informatik
  • Informatik, Lehramt, Wahlmodul

Lectures

The lectures will be held as 3+1 semester week hours. The dates are Tuesdays 8-10 and Thursdays 10-12, every other Thursday will be used for lab-sessions.

  • Tuesdays: 8-10 (O27/3211)
  • Thursdays: 10-12 (O28/1002)

 

Laborations

The labs take place in the lecture block and are interleaved with the lectures.