Visual Elements and Cognitive Biases Influence Interpretations of Trends in Scatter Plots

October 23, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Alexandre Filipowicz, Scott Carter, Nayeli Bravo, Rumen Iliev, Shabnam Hakimi, David Ayman Shamma, Kent Lyons, Candice Hogan, Charlene Wu arXiv ID 2310.15406 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.CY, cs.GR, cs.MM, cs.SI Citations 2 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Visualizations are common methods to convey information but also increasingly used to spread misinformation. It is therefore important to understand the factors people use to interpret visualizations. In this paper, we focus on factors that influence interpretations of scatter plots, investigating the extent to which common visual aspects of scatter plots (outliers and trend lines) and cognitive biases (people's beliefs) influence perception of correlation trends. We highlight three main findings: outliers skew trend perception but exert less influence than other points; trend lines make trends seem stronger but also mitigate the influence of some outliers; and people's beliefs have a small influence on perceptions of weak, but not strong correlations. From these results we derive guidelines for adjusting visual elements to mitigate the influence of factors that distort interpretations of scatter plots. We explore how these guidelines may generalize to other visualization types and make recommendations for future studies.
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