Martin M. Wattenberg

Last updated
Martin M. Wattenberg
Born1970 (age 5354)
United States
Alma materPh.D. Mathematics, U.C. Berkeley
Known for History Flow, Many Eyes, Treemap algorithms, Social Data Analysis
AwardsGold award / ID Magazine Interactive Design (1999), TR100 (2003)
Scientific career
Fields Visualization, interactive art, journalism
Institutions IBM Research
Google

Martin M. Wattenberg (born 1970) is an American scientist and artist known for his work with data visualization. He is currently the Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science at the Harvard University School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

Contents

Along with Fernanda Viégas, he worked at the Cambridge location of IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center as part of the Visual Communication Lab, and created Many Eyes. In April 2010, Wattenberg and Viégas started a new venture called Flowing Media, Inc., to focus on visualization aimed at consumers and mass audiences. [1] Four months later, both of them joined Google as the co-leaders of the Google's "Big Picture" data visualization group in Cambridge, Massachusetts. [2] [3]

Biography

Wattenberg grew up in Amherst, Massachusetts. He received an A.B. from Brown University in 1991, an M.S. from Stanford University in 1992, and a Ph.D. in Mathematics from U.C. Berkeley in 1996 under Charles C. Pugh with a thesis titled Generic families of dynamical systems on the circle. [4] [5] From 1996 through 2002, he lived in New York City and worked for Dow Jones, on the personal finance and investing site SmartMoney.com. In 2002 he took a position at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center, in its Cambridge, Massachusetts location; in 2004, he founded IBM Research's Visual Communication Lab. [6] In Fall 2021 Wattenberg joined Harvard University as Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science. [7]

Journalism

While at SmartMoney.com, Wattenberg focused on new forms of interactive web-based journalism. Early work in 1996-1997 ranged from service pieces, such as worksheets to guide financial decisions, to expository graphical narratives on subjects such as bond yield curves. In 1998 Wattenberg created the Map of the Market, which visualized the stock price performance of hundreds of publicly traded companies. The Map was the first web-based treemap and was widely imitated. [8] Subsequently, Wattenberg started a research and development group at SmartMoney, which was responsible for interactive charts, graphs, and simulations, as well as a library of visualization components. Outside of his work at Dow Jones, Wattenberg is known for interactive visualizations that have introduced mass audiences to data sets ranging from baby names [9] to museum collections at NASA [4] and the Smithsonian. [10]

Visualization research

Collaborative analysis and collective intelligence

Wattenberg, in partnership with Fernanda Viégas at IBM, has published widely on collective intelligence and the social use of data visualization. Their work with visualizations such as History Flow and Chromogram led to some of the earliest publications on the dynamics of Wikipedia, including the first scientific study of the repair of vandalism. [11] [12]

Wattenberg is one of the founders of IBM's experimental Many Eyes web site, created in 2007 [13] which seeks to make visualization technology accessible to the public. In addition to broad uptake from individuals, the technology from Many Eyes has been used by nonprofits and news outlets such as the New York Times Visualization Lab.

Visualization techniques and theory

Wattenberg invented or co-invented many visualization techniques. The Map of the Market was based on a new algorithm for treemap layouts (see Treemapping). The Arc Diagram is a novel technique for visualizing structure in long sequences, [14] closely related to linear embeddings of networks, a technique that has since been used by many other designers. [15] Wattenberg and Viégas together introduced several techniques for depicting text: in addition to the history flow technique described above, the two created such text visualizations as the Word Tree [16] and Chromogram. [17] With collaborator Zan Armstrong, Wattenberg developed a new way to visualize Simpson's paradox. [18]

Artwork

As an artist, Wattenberg uses interactive graphics and visualization as expressive media. He has primarily worked on internet-accessible projects, but has also created installations, videos, and prints.

In the 1990s he began to work with information visualization as an artistic medium. For example, his Shape of Song series (1999–2002) depicted the form of musical compositions; this project exists online as well as in prints that have been exhibited in multiple venues. [19] Starrynight (1999), a collaboration with Alexander Galloway and Mark Tribe, provided a new form of social, visual navigation for an online discussion. [20] Idealine (2001), an interactive representation of the online art universe, was the first internet artwork commissioned by the Whitney Museum of American Art, as well as a very early example of an artwork that used "crowdsourcing" to gather data. [21] Wattenberg has also worked with Golan Levin, contributing to the visualization technique used in The Secret Lives of Numbers (2002). [22] [23]

Wattenberg frequently works with Marek Walczak, with whom he formed a collaboration known as MW2MW. [24] A key theme of their work is the relationship between language and space. For example, Apartment took inspiration from the concept of a memory palace, turning free-form text entered by a viewer into an architectural floorplan. [25] The piece has appeared in many versions, including online (2000), an installation at the Whitney Museum of American Art (2001) and in many other venues. [26] Other works explore the possibilities of interaction: the Thinking Machine series (2004–2008), for example, is based on a chess-playing program that attempts to best the viewer while displaying its own thinking process. [27] [28]

Since 2003, Wattenberg has collaborated with Fernanda Viégas to create interactive works that evoke the joy of "revelation". [29] They have used academic techniques such as history flow to create prints that have been shown in venues such as the New York Museum of Modern Art. [30] The two have also created purely artistic visualizations. For example, the Fleshmap series (2008-2009) portrays aspects of sensuality, and includes work on the web, video, and installations. For example, Fleshmap: Touch provides a collective view of erogenous zones, [31] while Fleshmap: Listen visualizes the language used to describe the body in song lyrics. [32]

Publications

Key publications:

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "A New Chapter — Visual Hint". Hint.fm. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  2. "That was fast! — Visual Hint". Hint.fm. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  3. "Fernanda B. Viégas". Fernandaviegas.com. 2008-08-31. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
  4. 1 2 Jana, Reena (June 2007). "IBM's Data-Visualization Champion". BusinessWeek Online. Archived from the original on July 16, 2007.
  5. "Martin Watternberg". Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved 17 December 2022.
  6. Kirsner, Scott (December 2007). "Image Conscious". Fast Company.
  7. "Trailblazing visualization experts to join Harvard faculty | Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences". www.seas.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
  8. Eckett, Stephen (2002). Online Investing: 200 Essential Q&a's for the Internet. Harriman House Limited.
  9. Baker, Billy (9 August 2001). "He Creates Ways of Seeing Information". The Boston Globe.
  10. Mirapaul, Matthew (9 August 2001). "A Site Whose Riches Bob on the Surface". The New York Times.
  11. 2004: Studying Cooperation and Conflict between Authors with history flow Visualizations. Fernanda B. Viégas, Martin Wattenberg, and Kushal Dave. ACM Conference on Computer-Human Interaction (CHI)
  12. Shirky, Clay (2008). Here Comes Everybody (book). Penguin.
  13. Lines and Bubbles and Bars, Oh My! New Ways to Sift Data, Anne Eisenberg, the New York Times, August 30, 2008.
  14. Arc Diagrams: Visualizing Structure in Strings, Martin Wattenberg. IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization, 2002.
  15. Visual Complexity Gallery of Arc Diagrams, accessed Sept. 2, 2009.
  16. The Word Tree: An Interactive Visual Concordance Martin Wattenberg, Fernanda B. Viégas. IEEE InfoVis 2008
  17. Visualizing Activity on Wikipedia with Chromograms, Martin Wattenberg, Fernanda B. Viégas, and Kate Hollenbach. Interact 2007.
  18. Armstrong, Zan; Wattenberg, Martin (December 2014). "Visualizing Statistical Mix Effects and Simpson's Paradox". IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. 20 (12): 2132–2141. doi: 10.1109/TVCG.2014.2346297 . ISSN   1941-0506. PMID   26356927.
  19. Reas, Casey; Ben (2007). Processing: a programming handbook for visual designers and artists. MIT Press.
  20. Dodge, Martin; Kitchin (2007). Atlas of Cyberspace. Addison Wesley.
  21. Whitney Museum Artport Idealine, 2001
  22. The Secret Lives of Numbers (2002)
  23. Bulajic, Viktorija Vesna (2007). Database aesthetics: art in the age of information overflow. University of Minnesota Press.
  24. MW2MW home page
  25. Blais, Joline; Ippolito, Jon (2006). At the Edge of Art. Thames and Hudson.
  26. Altshuler, Bruce (2007). Collecting the New: Museums and Contemporary Art. Princeton University Press.
  27. Kurzweil, Ray (2005). The singularity is near: when humans transcend biology. Penguin.
  28. Adams, Randy; Gibson, Steve; Arisona, Stefan Muller (2008). Transdisciplinary Digital Art: Sound, Vision and the New Screen: Digital Art. Springer.
  29. Revelatory Interfaces, online video of MIT lecture, 2004.
  30. Design and the Elastic Mind (Exhibit at the New York Museum of Modern Art, February 24, 2008–May 12, 2008)
  31. Inside squash: art and sport confined, Cate McQuaid, The Boston Globe, April 29, 2009.
  32. Body Parts In Song: From Hands To Eyes NPR Weekend Edition, August 30, 2008.