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3 The purpose of this seminar is to independently scientifically work on a layout algorithm topic. The goal is to summarize the topic in an oral presentation and a written elaboration in form of a paper. Another purpose of this seminar is to practice working in structured and time-driven workflows (e.g. for conferences or workshops). Moreover, both of these aspects are good preparation for working on your thesis. We have many theses regarding these topics available; contact us if you are interested in that.
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6 This seminar is a bachelor and master module at the same time. Compared to the bachelor seminar, we expect that master students include more related papers and therefore write a longer paper and hold a longer presentation (see below).
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8 [[image:attach:image2016-7-7 15:43:29.png]] [[image:attach:image2016-7-7 15:43:25.png]]
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12 = Imprtant Dates =
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17 Requirements
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20 //Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten// von Prof. Peters
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24 Lecturers
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26 Reinhard von Hanxleden (rvh@informatik.uni-kiel.de)
27 Sören Domrös (sdo@informatik.uni-kiel.de)
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31 Block seminar day
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33 29.01.22
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35
36 = Topics =
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39 You may choose one of the following papers from the different topics. The papers marked with a are the ones that we deemed more important.
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42 The papers are assigned via //first-come-first-serve//. Already taken papers are crossed out. Many of the links do only work in the university network. If any problems occur feel free to contact us.
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44 {{info}}
45 Some papers are not freely available. These papers are linked in an internal page in our wiki. You can log in with your Ifi-account. If any problems occur contact sdo.
46 {{/info}}
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48 (% class="wikigeneratedid" %)
49 == ==
50
51 == Aesthetics and Perception ==
52
53 -- Lloyd, Rodgers, and Roberts. "Metro map colour-coding: effect on usability in route tracing." In International conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams, pp. 411-428. Springer, 2018. **[[PDF>>url:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Peter_Lloyd14/publication/324279056_Metro_Map_Colour-Coding_Effect_on_Usability_in_Route_Tracing/links/5ac94b090f7e9bcd519751ae/Metro-Map-Colour-Coding-Effect-on-Usability-in-Route-Tracing.pdf||shape="rect"]]**--
54
55 --Helen C. Purchase, Daniel Archambault, Stephen Kobourov, Martin Nöllenburg, Sergey Pupyrev, Hsiang-Yun Wu. "The Turing Test for Graph Drawing Algorithms". //In Processings of the 28th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2020),// pp. 466-481. [[**PDF**>>url:https://arxiv.org/pdf/2008.04869.pdf||shape="rect"]]--
56
57 --Burns, Carberry, Elzer, and Chester. "Automatically recognizing intended messages in grouped bar charts." In //International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams//, pp. 8-22. Springer, 2012. **[[PDF>>url:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Stephanie_Schwartz9/publication/262169666_Automatically_Recognizing_Intended_Messages_in_Grouped_Bar_Charts/links/550882ff0cf26ff55f82ccee.pdf||shape="rect"]]**--
58
59 == Human Computer Interaction ==
60
61 --Pourali, Atlee. "A Focus+Context Approach to Alleviate Cognitive Challenges of Editing and Debugging UML Models." In //ACM/IEEE 22nd International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MODELS)//, pp. 183–193. 2019. [[**PDF**>>url:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel7/8894013/8906890/08906900.pdf||shape="rect"]]--
62
63 --Frisch, Dachselt. "Off-Screen visualization techniques for class diagrams." In //Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Software Visualization//, pp. 163–172. 2010. [[**PDF**>>url:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Raimund_Dachselt/publication/220955887_Off-screen_visualization_techniques_for_class_diagrams/links/0fcfd50abd0eba0db2000000.pdf||shape="rect"]]--
64
65 --Pietriga. "A Toolkit for Addressing HCI Issues in Visual Language Environments." In //IEEE Symposium on Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing// (VL/HCC), pp.145–152. 2015. **[[PDF>>url:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/10093/32326/01509498.pdf||shape="rect"]]**--
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67 Green, Petre. "Usability Analysis of Visual Programming Environments - A Cognitive Dimensions Framework." In //Journal of Visual Languages and Computing//, pp. 131–174, Issue 7–2. 1996. [[**PDF**>>url:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marian-Petre-4/publication/200085937_Usability_Analysis_of_Visual_Programming_Environments_A_%27Cognitive_Dimensions%27_Framework/links/02bfe50fbf23476730000000/Usability-Analysis-of-Visual-Programming-Environments-A-Cognitive-Dimensions-Framework.pdf||shape="rect"]]
68
69 == Graph Drawing ==
70
71 **(Master)** Julien Walter, Johannes Zink, Joachim Baumeister, Alexander Wolff. "Layered Drawing of Undirected Graphs with Generalized Port Constraints". In //Processings of the 28th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2020),// pp. 220-234. **[[PDF>>url:https://arxiv.org/pdf/2008.10583.pdf||shape="rect"]]**
72
73 -- Chevalier and Safro. "Comparison of coarsening schemes for multilevel graph partitioning." In //International Conference on Learning and Intelligent Optimization//, pp. 191-205. Springer, 2009. [[**PDF**>>url:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.531.2924&rep=rep1&type=pdf||shape="rect"]]--
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75 Athenstädt, Hartmann, and Nöllenburg. "Simultaneous embeddability of two partitions." In //International Symposium on Graph Drawing//, pp. 64-75. Springer, 2014. [[**PDF**>>url:https://arxiv.org/pdf/1408.6019||shape="rect"]]
76
77 --Reyan Ahmed, Felice De Luca, Sabin Devkota, Stephen Kobourev, Mingwei Li. "Graph Drawing via Gradient Descent".In //Processings of the 28th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2020),// pp. 3-17. **[[PDF>>url:https://arxiv.org/abs/2008.05584||shape="rect"]]**--
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79 Amyra Meidiana, Seok-Hee Hong, Peter Eades. "New Quality Metrics for Dynamic Graph Drawing". In //Processings of the 28th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2020),// pp. 450-465. **[[PDF>>url:https://arxiv.org/pdf/2008.07764.pdf||shape="rect"]]**
80
81 == Euler Diagrams ==
82
83 --Bottoni, Costagliola, and Fish. "Euler diagram encodings." In //International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams//, pp. 148-162. Springer, 2012. [[**PDF**>>url:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/262172961_Euler_Diagram_Encodings||shape="rect"]]--
84
85 --Chapman, Stapleton, Rodgers, Micallef, and Blake. "Visualizing sets: an empirical comparison of diagram types." In //International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams//, pp. 146-160. Springer, 2014. [[**PDF**>>url:http://eprints.brighton.ac.uk/13703/1/diagrams2014%20Visualizing%20DataREVISED.pdf||shape="rect"]]--
86
87 == Other Types of Diagrams ==
88
89 --Erwig and Smeltzer. "Variational Pictures." In //International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams//, pp. 55-70. Springer, 2018. **[[Seite mit PDF>>doc:SS20 Eingeschränkt sichtbare Paper]]**--
90
91 = Schedule =
92
93 == Dates in the semester (currently not final) ==
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97 Datum
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99 Meilenstein
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102 Mo., 25.10., 23:59
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104 Deadline for topic
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107 Mo., 25.10., 12:00
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109 Kick-off
110 //The kick-off will take place online. We will send you the corresponding link.//
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113 Mo., 15.11., 23:59
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115 Deadline of the first draft in EasyChair
116 //Content: abstract, introduction, outline, notes for chapter contents, bibliography//
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120 In week of above, individual dates
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123 Individual dates
124 //Online, as discussed with advisor//
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128 Mo., 13.12, 23:59
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131 Deadline of the first full version
132 //Submission-Update in EasyChair//
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136 In week of above, individual dates
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139 Individual dates
140 //Online, as discussed with advisor//
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144 Mo., 10.01., 23:59
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147 Deadline of the review version
148 //Submission-Update in EasyChair//
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152 subsequently
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155 Review assignment
156 //By e-mail//
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160 Mo., 17.01., 23:59
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163 Deadline reviews
164 //In EasyChair//
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168 tbd
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171 Talk on how to do talks/presentations (the talk-talk)?
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175 In the week of Mo., 10.01.
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178 Individual dates for presentation slides
179 //Online, as discussed with advisor. The slides have to be available online or have been sent beforehand via e-mail.//
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183 Mo.,  24.01., 23:59
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186 Deadline final version
187 //Submission-Update in EasyChair//
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191 Sa. 29.1.
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194 Presentations
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196
197 == The Final Presentations ==
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199 Currently, it is unclear how the talks will take place. This will be influenced by the development of the pandemic. We can think of recorded videos or a live conference or other alternatives. We expect to be able to make a decision at the beginning of January.
200
201 = Schedule and Grading =
202
203 == Papers, Talks, Review ==
204
205 This seminar includes the creation of a paper, a talk, and two reviews.
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207 === Paper ===
208
209 The paper should provide an overview of the chosen topic. It should be written in a style that late bachelor student can understand it. The paper should be 6 (master) or 4 (bachelor) pages long, not more not less, and it should use the ACM LaTeX-style (more details below). We advise you to read the [[writing advice>>doc:RTSYS.Writing and Grading Theses||shape="rect"]] for writing a thesis.
210
211 === Talk/Discussions ===
212
213 Your talk should be 40 minutes (master) or 25 minutes (bachelor) long. This is followed by 5 minutes of questions. The slides should contain page numbers to allow the participants to ask specific questions after the talk. It would be great to include a short tool demo if your topic includes some concrete implementation. You can freely choose your presentation tool. The talk can be held in English or German.
214
215 Your talk is followed by a discussion that should involve your fellow students (not just the lecturers). That means that you should also make an effort to get engaged in your fellow students' talks as well.
216
217 === Review ===
218
219 A review consist of two parts:
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221 1. General comments (what do you like / not like regarding content, structure, and readability) as well as general suggestions to improve the paper
222 1. In detail remarks and corrections
223
224 The first part of the review should be at least half an A4 page long. It should be written in full text and not only consist of notes. The review content should be similar to the review you get during the individual dates, however, it should be more in detail and with a clear focus on content, structure, and readability of the paper.
225
226 It is not possible to add files in the EasyChair review form. Therefore, it is not possible to add an annotated pdf as detailed correction.
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228 The reviews are assigned after the review-version deadline and are based on the submitted version of the papers.
229
230 == Grades ==
231
232 This seminar is graded. The grade is based on each milestone (the different versions of the paper, the reviews, the slides, the talk, your engagement in the discussion of other talks). For each milestone, quality and timeliness (see dates) are considered. If you miss deadlines, you may fail the seminar.
233
234 = Technical Details =
235
236 == LaTeX ==
237
238 Your papers should be created using LaTeX and have to be in the ACM style. You can find all necessary files in this [[archive>>attach:paper-template.zip]], including an example document that includes helpful LaTeX-hints to start with. Copy all files in some folder and begin to write your paper.
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240 LaTeX can create a bibliography (it includes scientific publications, which are referenced to prove statements) too. The example includes a file named {{code language="none"}}myrefs.bib{{/code}}, which holds the references. ACM provides a short overview with [[examples>>url:https://www.acm.org/publications/authors/bibtex-formatting||shape="rect"]] of bibliography entries.
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242 While writing your paper keep the following in mind:
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244 * Think about whether you want to write your paper in German or English and make use to use the corresponding ACM-style.
245 * Graphics from your original paper should not just be screenshotted and added to your paper. Ideally, you create your own graphic (ideally as a vector graphic) to have good quality graphics.
246 * A paper always consists of an introduction, at least one main chapter, and a conclusion.
247
248 == EasyChair Tutorial ==
249
250 You can find our seminar in EasyChair [[here>>url:https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=kielrtsyssem21ws||shape="rect"]].
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252
253 = Ressources =
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255
256 In general, it is advised to look for related work in the university network since you will get access to many online libraries. We the following search engines and web pages:
257
258 * Google Scholar: [[http:~~/~~/scholar.google.de/>>url:http://scholar.google.de/||shape="rect" class="external-link"]]
259 * dblp: [[http:~~/~~/dblp.uni-trier.de/>>url:http://dblp.uni-trier.de/||shape="rect"]]
260 * CiteSeer: [[http:~~/~~/citeseer.ist.psu.edu/>>url:http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/||shape="rect" class="external-link"]]
261 * IEEE-Xplore: [[http:~~/~~/ieeexplore.ieee.org/Xplore/dynhome.jsp>>url:http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/Xplore/dynhome.jsp||shape="rect" class="external-link"]]
262 * ACM Digital Library: [[http:~~/~~/portal.acm.org/dl.cfm>>url:http://portal.acm.org/dl.cfm||shape="rect" class="external-link"]]
263 * Universitätsbibliothek Digitale Medien: [[http:~~/~~/www.uni-kiel.de/ub/emedien/index.html>>url:http://www.uni-kiel.de/ub/emedien/index.html||shape="rect"]]
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