Connecting flights could be visualised but this
feature is not implemented at this stage.
The discrete time visualisation is relatively
arduous to read: further development is needed
in order to embed more user-side interaction
(typically, brushing data items).
Cumulative visualisations (several days shown
in one same space) are rather dense, in
particular in discrete time – yet they are useful
to compare the flight offer on one day to
possibilities on other days. This would require
a specific visual encoding effort.
Furthermore, we did conduct an informal round
of evaluation with a group of six testers – who were
only asked to decode the information - but are fully
aware that a robust evaluation effort remains to be
done both in terms of readability of the visualisation,
and of added-value. In short, what we present should
definitely be understood as an early proof-of-
concept prototype: we do acknowledge that there are
at this stage significant limitations that minor its
potential impact.
6 CONCLUSIONS
Online planners and travel reservations systems play
today a prominent role in the everyday life of
travellers, yet the very nature of the queries users
formulate (ultimate result: one flight) limits the type
of information one can expect to retrieve. We
introduce a proof-of-concept visualisation that sums
up in a synthetic way an airport’s [where to, when
to] profile and thereby allows users to get an overall
view of its flight offer over time and in space.
The visualisation’s role is not to replace the
above mentioned reservation systems, but provides
an upstream service, helping to unveil significant
spatio-temporal patterns in relation with a given
airport. It is implemented on a real life data set: the
winter 2013/2014 schedule of the airport in Nice
(circ. 200 flights per week). At this stage the
development still leaves a lot of room for
improvement, yet it already underlines the potential
benefit of a context + focus information visualisation
solution in renewing the way users portray an
airport’s flight offer. This experiment now needs to
be questioned through a robust evaluation effort, and
in terms of genericity (other transportation modes
for instance). Future works will primarily focus on
added-value assessment, user-side interaction and
visual encoding issues, but at the end of the day we
view this specific visualisation as one in many: it can
be seen as one element of a toolbox to come that
would include alternative solutions, suited to major
hubs, including isochrones, etc.
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