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Posts by Lane Harrison

That’s great—I bet we’re pretty decent at detecting differences in food! The semantics of the encoding align much better with here, too. Makes me wonder if semantic alignment is an easier task in a game which has a central theme/world

4 weeks ago 3 0 0 0

Agree they aren’t fully in line. There are some variations like Chernoff Fish which explore the idea beyond faces. I was mainly thinking channel mapping: something like amount of blood, black eyes, head tilt, etc., mapped to health

4 weeks ago 1 0 1 0

Chernoff faces come to mind en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernof...

4 weeks ago 1 0 1 0

We do 8 weeks! (For undergrad at least…)

5 months ago 1 0 0 0

What are your favorite examples for people using #datavis to tell about aspects/parts/events of their lives?

5 months ago 7 3 7 0

(would watch a 30-minute news segment on this sort of analysis...)

5 months ago 1 0 1 0
Screenshot of paper titled “A Priest, a Rabbi, and an Atheist Walk Into an Error Bar: Religious Meditations on Uncertainty Visualization” by Michael Correll and Lane Harrison. Below the title, an eye in a winged triangle is encircled by shapes and a ribbon with religious symbols. Text at the bottom reads “BE NOT CERTAIN.”

Screenshot of paper titled “A Priest, a Rabbi, and an Atheist Walk Into an Error Bar: Religious Meditations on Uncertainty Visualization” by Michael Correll and Lane Harrison. Below the title, an eye in a winged triangle is encircled by shapes and a ribbon with religious symbols. Text at the bottom reads “BE NOT CERTAIN.”

Find out what happens when “A Priest, a Rabbi, and an Atheist Walk Into an Error Bar 🍸”. Join @birdbassador.jorts.horse.ap.brid.gy & @laneh.bsky.social for their religious meditations on uncertainty visualization at alt.VIS, Sunday 9 AM - 12:30 PM!
#ieeevis #uncertaintyvis
arxiv.org/abs/2509.08213

5 months ago 1 1 1 0
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Home | ReVISit reVISit: Reproducible and Powerful Visualization User Studies

Revisit by @laneh.bsky.social and team is an excellent option. It requires some configuration and setup, but it works beautifully and all your data stays on your server. (revisit.dev)

6 months ago 8 3 0 0

here's a preprint of the unhinged paper i wrote with @lane

we stop just short of saying that the unthinking use of frequentist statistics puts your very soul at hazard
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2509.08213

7 months ago 6 2 0 2
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The reVISit team will be hosting an open hackathon at TU Graz in Austria, immediately after IEEE VIS from Monday November 10 to Wednesday November 13. Anyone interested in contributing to reVISit is invited to participate!

7 months ago 3 1 1 0
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@hrbrmstr.dev thanks for the ping!

@erickapitanski.bsky.social very cool project (poking around now) -- I'll be in CA in a few weeks to advise student projects, would be happy to swing by if doable

7 months ago 0 0 0 0
dithered hypercard-style picture of a winged all-seeing eye being orbited by bar charts with cross error bars, flanked by discrete gaussian distributions

dithered hypercard-style picture of a winged all-seeing eye being orbited by bar charts with cross error bars, flanked by discrete gaussian distributions

spent a chunk of today making biblically accurate error bars

8 months ago 8 2 1 0

Super love seeing regional datavis events making a comeback (and happy to be in town!) ->

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

So modest! Had an AVD-inspired hour+ long convo just the other week 😁

9 months ago 3 0 0 0
A screenshot of the reVISit interface showing the answers and provenance from a participant who completed the question. The study shown is a replication of He et al.’s pattern design study.

A screenshot of the reVISit interface showing the answers and provenance from a participant who completed the question. The study shown is a replication of He et al.’s pattern design study.

Going to #CHI2025 in Japan? Interested in running user studies?

Sign up for our virtual CHI 2025 course that teaches you how to use reVISit, a new, open-source user study tool reducing the tedium of study design. Come learn through some practical examples.

cvent.me/g5mx2w
revisit.dev

1 year ago 6 3 2 0
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A new way to make graphs more accessible to blind and low-vision readers Designed to help blind and low-vision readers understand graphics, the “Tactile Vega-Lite” system from MIT CSAIL converts data into a standard visual graph and a tactile chart. Accessibility standards...

Tactile charts are an important tool for conveying data to blind and low vision people via embossed paper. However, tactile charts require high levels of time and expertise to design.

Introducing Tactile Vega-Lite, new work at #CHI2025 led by MIT SM student Katie Chen

news.mit.edu/2025/making-...

1 year ago 33 15 2 0

behold the CONNECTED SPLATTERPIE

kneel before my works, ye mighty, and despair

1 year ago 393 68 34 23
AI-generated parody of Minard‘s famous visualization of Napoleon‘s march to Moscow, embellished with all kinds of Studio Ghibli-inspired characters

AI-generated parody of Minard‘s famous visualization of Napoleon‘s march to Moscow, embellished with all kinds of Studio Ghibli-inspired characters

The future of #datavis

1 year ago 20 11 0 3
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1) Cool VIS study, 2) Help our replication effort! ->

1 year ago 0 2 0 0

Also curious about what might be driving this. Are folks with less experience diving into more complex tool ecosystems thanks to AI? Kind of what @mjskay.com was getting at... 🤔

Pre-AI, maybe folks learned better norms for asking for help, etc. over time?

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

design constraints good

1 year ago 2 0 0 0
A chart of country noises (lawnmower, rain on roof, frog, mosquito and more) presented to look like sound waves whereas they are more like ornamental border patterns - especially like old letterpress and printing pieces. This is probably what was used for them.

A chart of country noises (lawnmower, rain on roof, frog, mosquito and more) presented to look like sound waves whereas they are more like ornamental border patterns - especially like old letterpress and printing pieces. This is probably what was used for them.

Country Noises.

(Saul Steinberg, 1979)
saulsteinbergfoundation.org

1 year ago 227 58 2 3
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There be dragons: dataviz in the industry I started being serious about data visualization around 2005, when the field was still pretty niche and people like Martin Wattenberg, Ben…

"…there’s one nut we have not been able to crack: anchoring bespoke data visualization as a full fledged profession in corporate settings."

Re-reading this article from 2017 (medium.com/visualizing-...), I wonder — where are we at 8 years on?

1 year ago 29 9 5 0

Slightly annoying when a paper describing an experiment doesn't include a screenshot of the actual task participants performed.

(I wrote the paper in question 🫠...)

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Cool possibilities for interaction studies ->

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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This ggplot chart was generated without any theming support, *at all*.

1 year ago 24 5 2 3
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Image or Information? Examining the Nature and Impact of Visualization Perceptual Classification How do people internalize visualizations: as images or information? In this study, we investigate the nature of internalization for visualizations (i.e., how the mind encodes visualizations in memory)...

💯 + reminds me of this recent VIS paper "Image or Information" -> arxiv.org/abs/2307.10571

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

Any freelance Svelte/data visualization developers among my followers? Looking for someone with some availability, starting in a couple of months

1 year ago 23 17 9 0
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revisitpy-examples/example_jnd_study/example_jnd_study.ipynb at main · revisit-studies/revisitpy-examples Example directory for all revisit-py features. Contribute to revisit-studies/revisitpy-examples development by creating an account on GitHub.

See it in action in the clip ⬆️, where we replicate a correlation perception experiment in ~160 lines of Python.

💻 Code available here ➡️ github.com/revisit-stud...

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

🛫 You can pilot and iterate on the experiment instantly from within a notebook environment.

📈 You can even test data collection and prototype your analyses in the same notebook!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0