Genest, A., et al. “Useful Junk?: The Effects of Visual Embellishment on Comprehension and Memorability of Charts”. Proceedings of the 28th International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, April 12-15, 2010, Atlanta, GA, USA, ACM, 2010, pp. 2573-82, https://scholar2.islandarchives.ca/islandora/object/ir%3A5297.

Genre

  • Conference Proceedings
Contributors
Contributor: Proceedings of the 28th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, April 12-15, 2010, Atlanta, GA, USA
Author: Genest, A.
Author: Gutwin, C.
Author: Brooks, C.
Author: Mandryk, R. L.
Author: McDine, D.
Author: Bateman, S.
Date Issued
2010
Publisher
ACM
Abstract

Guidelines for designing information charts (such as bar charts) often state that the presentation should reduce or remove 'chart junk' - visual embellishments that are not essential to understanding the data. In contrast, some popular chart designers wrap the presented data in detailed and elaborate imagery, raising the questions of whether this imagery is really as detrimental to understanding as has been proposed, and whether the visual embellishment may have other benefits. To investigate these issues, we conducted an experiment that compared embellished charts with plain ones, and measured both interpretation accuracy and long-term recall. We found that people's accuracy in describing the embellished charts was no worse than for plain charts, and that their recall after a two-to-three-week gap was significantly better. Although we are cautious about recommending that all charts be produced in this style, our results question some of the premises of the minimalist approach to chart design.

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Language

  • English
Page range
2573-2582
Host Title
Proceedings of the 28th international conference on Human factors in computing systems, April 12-15, 2010, Atlanta, GA, USA
ISBN
9781605589299