Maps of Computer Science
Daniel Fried, Stephen G. Kobourov

TL;DR
This paper introduces a visual exploration system for research papers using maps of computer science, where paper titles form a geographic-like map to visualize research topics and their evolution over time.
Contribution
It presents a novel visualization approach using paper titles to create interactive maps of research topics, enabling analysis of research trends and profiles of researchers or groups.
Findings
Effective visualization of research field evolution
Ability to compare research profiles across conferences and journals
Modular system adaptable to different data sources
Abstract
We describe a practical approach for visual exploration of research papers. Specifically, we use the titles of papers from the DBLP database to create what we call maps of computer science (MoCS). Words and phrases from the paper titles are the cities in the map, and countries are created based on word and phrase similarity, calculated using co-occurrence. With the help of heatmaps, we can visualize the profile of a particular conference or journal over the base map. Similarly, heatmap profiles can be made of individual researchers or groups such as a department. The visualization system also makes it possible to change the data used to generate the base map. For example, a specific journal or conference can be used to generate the base map and then the heatmap overlays can be used to show the evolution of research topics in the field over the years. As before, individual researchers or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsData Visualization and Analytics · Web Data Mining and Analysis · Video Analysis and Summarization
