IEEE Visualization '97

VISUALIZATION '97 WORKSHOPS
Saturday, October 18, 1997

Contact the workshop organizer for workshop registration information and fees.

Workshop on Issues in the Integration of Data Mining and Data Visualization
Saturday, October 18,1997 (Crescent II)
Georges Grinstein, The MITRE Corporation
grinstein@cs.uml.edu
Data Visualization deals with the effective portrayal of data with a goal
towards insight about the data. Typically, the data is of high volume,
multidimensional in nature, and does not lend itself to easy display. The data
is also often non-spatial and temporal in nature.
Data visualization software systems are very popular with end-user domain
scientists who require visual tools to explore and analyze their data. These
visual tools however are used strictly as output of the exploration process and
have received much attention whereas the input issues to the exploration
process still have not. The knowledge-discovery-in-databases (KDD) community
looks at visualization as a back-end of the exploration process; the
visualization community looks at KDD and analytic methods also as applications
to generate displays. However visualization can be used as input to KDD and
analytic tools; it can also be used to support computational steering. This
workshop will continue the discussions started at the first two workshop and
focus on these and other issues that make a case for integrating KDD and
visualization technologies.
Two previous Workshops (Siggraph '90 and Visualization '91) have dealt with
areas such as high-level requirements for data structures and access software,
and data visualization environments. The first and second workshop on Database
Issues for Data Visualization held in 1993 and 1995 explored the fundamental
issues. A number of experimental, prototype, and research systems were
presented. The second workshop also saw a beginning interest with data mining
and visualization integration. This trend so significant in the commercial
sector today is in its infancy.
Participation is limited to 20 people.

Workshop on PC-Based Visualization and Computer Graphics
Saturday, October 18, 1997 (Crescent III)
Bill Ribarsky,Georgia Institute of Technology
ribarsky@cc.gatech.edu
This full-day workshop will examine the exciting possibilities and massive new
markets that will result from the wide availability of interactive 3D graphics
on PCs. Already consumers can buy 3D graphics accelerators for their home
computers, and Intel estimates that by the year 2000, 80% of all PCs will have
3D graphics. What is to be done with this enormous increase in the availability
of computer graphics to the consumer? What tools and applications will be
needed? It may be that applications that are now minor or non-existent could
become dominant in the coming years. How will we address the concurrent growth
in the visualization of non-scientific data, and how will burgeoning areas such
as the Web be affected by the wide availability of 3D computer graphics? A key
question is: the PC is ubiquitous, 3D graphics is about to become ubiquitous,
can we make visualization ubiquitous, too? This workshop will address these and
other issues.
To insure the widest possible dissemination of workshop discussions, a report
on its activities will appear in IEEE Computer Graphics & Applications. In
addition the report will be posted on the TCCG Web page. Finally, we will
decide at the workshop whether to have a full symposium with refereed papers
and a published proceedings at a future Visualization conference. For workshop
attendees, this will be an opportunity to get involved early in establishing
and running this symposium.