Showing posts with label space tree. Show all posts
Showing posts with label space tree. Show all posts

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Visualising taxonomic classifications using SpaceTrees

The problem of displaying large taxonomic classifications on a web page continues to be an on again-off again obsession. My latest experiment makes use of Nicolas Garcia Belmonte's wonderful JavaScript Infovis Toolkit (JIT), which provides implementations of classic visualisations such as treemaps, hyperbolic trees, and SpaceTrees.

SpaceTrees were developed at Maryland's HCIL lab, and that lab has applied them to biodiversity informatics. The LepTree project has also used them (see LepTaxonTree). I've not been a huge fan, mainly because the existing implementation is a stand-alone Java program, which somewhat limits it's utility. But JIT changes all that.

To get a sense of whether SpaceTrees would be useful, I took Belmonte's second SpaceTree example as a starting point. In this example, nodes are created on demand (rather than loading the entire tree into memory). It proved relatively straightforward (after getting my head around making Ajax requests using Mootools) to modify the example to load nodes from a local copy of the Catalogue of Life 2008 classification.



I've put a live version of the Catalogue of Life SpaceTree up at http://bioguid.info/demos/spacetree. It doesn't do much, beyond display the tree, together with some basic information about the node. But I think it shows the power of Javacsript to create pleasing visualisations, and the potential of SpaceTrees as a simple tool to browse large taxonomic classifications.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

JavaScript Information Visualization Toolkit


I've just discovered Nicolas Garcia Belmonte's JavaScript Information Visualization Toolkit (JIT). Wow! This is very cool stuff (and no Flash). To quote from the web site:
The JIT is an advanced JavaScript infovis toolkit based on 5 papers about different information visualization techniques.
The JIT implements advanced features of information visualization like Treemaps (with the slice and dice and squarified methods), an adapted visualization of trees based on the Spacetree, a focus+context technique to plot Hyperbolic Trees, and a radial layout of trees with advanced animations (RGraph).

Nicolas also links to a talk by Tamara Munzner, which I've embedded below to remind myself to watch it.