#5830. Design and Evaluation of Visualization Techniques to Facilitate Argument Exploration

July 2026publication date
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Journal’s subject area:
Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design;
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Abstract:
This paper reports the design and comparison of three visualizations to represent the structure and content within arguments. Arguments are artifacts of reasoning widely used across domains such as education, policy making, and science. An argument is made up of sequences of statements (premises) which can support or contradict each other, individually or in groups through Boolean operators. Understanding the resulting hierarchical structure of arguments while being able to read the arguments text poses problems related to overview, detail, and navigation. Based on interviews with argument analysts we iteratively designed three techniques, each using combinations of tree visualizations (sunburst, icicle), content display (in-situ, tooltip) and interactive navigation.
Keywords:
Hybrid visualisation techniques; interaction; Text visualisation; visualization

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