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© 2008 Panopticon Software.
All rights reserved.

VISUALIZE MULTIPLE DATASETS AND COMPARE TRENDS
WITH HORIZON GRAPHS

Horizon Graph Information Visualization
Click on the image to see a full screen display of over 30 time series datasets on a single screen with this Horizon Graph.

See huge amounts of information
in a single screen

Horizon Graphs are a fantastic way to overview a large number of time series in a limited rectangular space. Since this information visualization packs the information in a line graph in 1/6th the space through a smart pre-attentive color encoding, it allows for an overview of a large number of time series. Users can scan huge amounts of data points across all relevant time series and immediately identify areas of concern that require closer scrutiny.

Free trial of Panopticon Horizon Graph data visualization software.We developed the Horizon Graph to make it easy to examine how a large number of items (stocks, product sales, employee satisfaction, and other data) have changed through time.

  • To do so in a way that allows them to spot extraordinary behaviors and predominant patterns
  • To view each of the items independently from the others when they wish
  • To make comparisons between the items
  • To view changes that occurred with enough precision to determine if further examination is required
Standard Line Graph Data Visualization

Start with a standard line graph.

 
Color code the line graph data visualization
Color code the graph — red indicates negative values and blue indicates positive values. Shades of red and blue indicate value ranges.
 
Invert the values in the color coded data visualization
Invert the negative values so that the entire graph is above the "zero" line.
 
Collapse the data visualization to take up less vertical space
Collapse the graph on itself so that all values appear in a constrained vertical space.

See and compare trends in complex datasets

This data visualization displays quantitative values using a combination of length (like in a line graph, where the height of the curve represents the underlying value) and color. Users can read exact values from the visualization by hovering their cursor over specific points on the Graph.

Our Horizon Graph visualization is particularly useful when you need to see a large number of time series on a single screen. This makes it easy to compare trends and spot patterns that would be very difficult or impossible to see in a standard report. They work well with Treemap, Heatmap, Heat Matrix, Barseries and Stack Graph visualizations since they allow you to see your data from different perspectives.

Information Visualization guru Stephen Few wrote about Horizon Graphs in his influential blog, Perceptual Edge, where he said:

"Almost every good invention is developed in response to a particular problem. The horizon graph was developed in response to a need shared by many organizations to examine how a large number of items (stocks, product sales, employee satisfaction, and so on) changed through time... The Horizon Graph succeeds because its designer kept the rules of visual perception in mind as he worked his way, one design step at a time, testing each as he proceeded, towards the goal. This is a good example of how effective innovations in the field of information visualization are developed. "

"The information visualization research community produces many innovations each year, which I’m always excited to discover in the research literature or during visits to research labs. I get a special thrill, however, when I find an effective innovation that has been incorporated into commercial software, where it must reside to reach a broad audience. Only a few commercial software vendors are producing effective visualization solutions today. When I run across an example like the Horizon Graph, it gives me joy to make it known and praise its worth. It gives me greater joy by far than what I get when bemoaning the poor designs of most
business intelligence vendors, which is rarely fun at all."

Read Stephen Few's entire article about Horizon Graphs here.