Back to Search Start Over

The Effect of Alignment on People's Ability to Judge Event Sequence Similarity

Authors :
Roy Alan Ruddle
Jürgen Bernard
Joern Kohlhammer
Hendrik Lücke-Tieke
Thorsten May
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. 28:3070-3081
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2022.

Abstract

Event sequences are central to the analysis of data in domains that range from biology and health, to logfile analysis and people's everyday behavior. Many visualization tools have been created for such data, but people are error-prone when asked to judge the similarity of event sequences with basic presentation methods. This article describes an experiment that investigates whether local and global alignment techniques improve people's performance when judging sequence similarity. Participants were divided into three groups (basic versus local versus global alignment), and each participant judged the similarity of 180 sets of pseudo-randomly generated sequences. Each set comprised a target, a correct choice and a wrong choice. After training, the global alignment group was more accurate than the local alignment group (98 versus 93 percent correct), with the basic group getting 95 percent correct. Participants' response times were primarily affected by the number of event types, the similarity of sequences (measured by the Levenshtein distance) and the edit types (nine combinations of deletion, insertion and substitution). In summary, global alignment is superior and people's performance could be further improved by choosing alignment parameters that explicitly penalize sequence mismatches.

Details

ISSN :
21609306 and 10772626
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bfb59995c1c8657ed8adb7430b83aa38