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Discovery
A New Vision for Scientific Visualizations

New technologies create a relatively easy and inexpensive way for researchers to create high-quality visualizations from large data sets

A young man stands in front a bank of computer monitors that project a simulation of river currents.

Using VisTrails, researchers can create large visualizations from large data sets.
Credit and Larger Version

March 3, 2009

From Isaac Newton's orbiting cannonball to Albert Einstein's famous journey beside a beam of light, the history of science is full of famous visualizations that helped lead to new breakthroughs in how we understand complex concepts and phenomena.

In recent decades, researchers have used computers to build complex visualizations based on large data sets to gain a better perspective on their research. When a computer combines a map with the data from thousands of sensors measuring ocean currents and temperatures around the globe, for example, a collection of numbers can become a stunning visualization that helps us understand shifting climate patterns. Likewise, a computer-generated visualization can help a surgeon better understand what is happening inside a patient's heart before ever picking up a scalpel.

Programming a computer to produce these visualizations is not an easy task, however. And as the amount of data collected in our world grows, the challenge of organizing all that information into an accurate and cohesive picture becomes even more difficult.

Enter VisTrails, an NSF-supported suite of visualization tools developed by Juliana Freire and Claudio Silva, both associate professors of computer science at the University of Utah. VisTrails makes it much easier for scientists to create complex visualizations, data mining and other types of large-scale data analysis applications by automating many of the difficult and time-consuming backend work that goes into producing them.

VisTrails automatically manages the data, metadata and the data exploration process necessary to create visualizations, a chore that is typically quite tedious and time-consuming tasks when trying to organize the vast volumes of data. The result is a tool that lets researchers focus on the data sets and visualizations themselves, rather than the work needed to bring them together.

VisTrails also offers a cost-effective way of creating large display arrays for presenting the visualizations it creates. To get an idea of how it works, imagine walking into an electronics store and gathering up several computers and then grabbing 24 large flat-screen video monitors. Using VisTrails, you could actually get these computers and monitors to work together to produce a single high-resolution visualization of the brain's vascular system or dynamics of an erupting volcano.

The technology is already being used by universities, laboratories and even private companies around the world, and the Utah team plans future upgrades to make the system even more robust and easier to use.

--  Dana W. Cruikshank, (703) 292-8070 dcruiksh@nsf.gov
--  Maria Zemankova, (703) 292-8930 mzemanko@nsf.gov

Investigators
Juliana Freire
Claudio Silva

Related Institutions/Organizations
University of Utah

Locations
Utah

Related Programs
Computing Research Infrastructure Cluster

Related Awards
#0751152 CRI: IAD: A Service-Oriented Architecture for The Computation, Visualization, and Management of Scientific Data
#0746500 CAREER: Storing, Querying and Re-Using Provenance of Computational Tasks
#0513692 Managing Complex Visualizations

Total Grants
$1,283,977

Related Agencies
U.S. Department of Energy

Related Websites
The VisTrails project Web site: http://www.vistrails.org/index.php/Main_Page

Photo of Juliana Freire in front of a bank of computer monitors.
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An interview with Juliana Freire, one of the creators of VisTrails, a data visualization program.
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Photo of a bank of computer monitors showing a visualization of the human brain.
A visualization of the human brain using VisTrails.
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National Science Foundation Computer & Information Science & Engineering (CISE)
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Last Updated:
March 6, 2009
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Last Updated: March 6, 2009