NodeXL is designed for network visualization, but we've begun to integrate text in interesting ways. For example see: http://www.nodexlgraphgallery.org/Pages/Graph.aspx?graphID=525 In the graph, which was created by Marc Smith,users are clustered based on their network connections (not their use of words). Next, the most common words are overlaid on top of the network clusters to give a sense of what each cluster is discussing. Data for this network is pulled from everyone who said "pinkslime" on Twitter during a certain time period (see details underneath graph). Derek Hansen Assistant Professor Brigham Young University On Sat, Apr 21, 2012 at 5:55 AM, Asimina Vasalou <minav@luminainteractive.com> wrote:
Dear all,
I am putting together a state-of-the-art report on interactive visualisations of language. I am looking for examples of applications that visualise language for purposes of sense making, awareness, insight, informing action etc. If anyone has examples to share, I would be grateful if they can contact me.
Thank you! Mina
------------------------------------ Mina Vasalou Research Fellow HCI Centre, School of Computer Science University of Birmingham www.luminainteractive.com
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