Tuija Stützle’s research while affiliated with University of Eastern Finland and other places

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Publications (3)


Lightweight techniques for structural evaluation of animated metaphors
  • Article

July 2007

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125 Reads

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9 Citations

Interacting with Computers

Jorma Sajaniemi

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Tuija Stützle

Visual metaphors in the form of still or animated pictures have been used in user interfaces with the hope of enhancing learning and use of computer applications. This paper studies animated metaphors with the intent to understand how they relate to human cognition and how their quality can be measured. We present a model of the relationships within metaphors, suggest lightweight evaluation techniques based on this model, and test these techniques in an empirical investigation. The results indicate that a lightweight analysis based on still images and made by domain-aware but metaphor-unaware judges can be used as a first step in deciding which metaphors are worthy of further study, and to direct animation efforts to overcome the most crucial problems. Furthermore, the results show that animation may increase or decrease the quality of a metaphor by considerable amounts; hence the final evaluation must be based on actual use of fully implemented metaphors. The results also confirm earlier suggestions to use rich metaphors and provides evidence that richness of the still image is important for the effectiveness of animation.


Figure 1: Visualizations of the same operation for different roles: comparing whether a most-recent holder (a) or a stepper (b) is positive. 
Figure 2: Visualization of an array element comparison in the PlanAni system. 
Figure 3: PlanAni and control metaphors for stepper. 
Figure 4: PlanAni and control metaphors for fixed value, follower, gatherer, and temporary. 
Figure 5 gives for each image the proportion of marked words of all words given to the image. For all other roles except stepper, the role images have a larger amount of correct associations than the control images. Based on chi squared test on average judge decisions, differences between groups are significant for the images representing fixed value (χ 2 =7.083, df=1, p=0.0078) and follower (χ 2 =10.245, df=1, p=0.0014) but not for other roles. 

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An Empirical Evaluation of Visual Metaphors in the Animation of Roles of Variables
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2005

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123 Reads

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10 Citations

Informing Science The International Journal of an Emerging Transdiscipline

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Citations (2)


... For instance, 'tip of the iceberg' is a visual metaphor frequently used to describe that something being discussed, encountered, felt, or experienced is a relatively small proportion of a much larger concept, situation or problem that remains unexplored (Schuman, Rowe, Glazer, & Redding, 1977). Furthermore, verbal metaphors and their visual counterparts are also commonly used in scientific writings (Robson, 1985), medicine (Marcos, 1997), biology (Shilo, 2013), physiology (Paton, 1992), chemistry (Bhushan & Rosenfeld, 1995), psychiatry (Alyami et al., 2015), psychology (Nash, 1962;Stott et al., 2010), computer science (Carroll & Mack, 1985;Petre & Blackwell, 1999;Stützle & Sajaniemi, 2005), and films (Forceville, 2015). ...

Reference:

Enhancing suicide risk assessment through the use of visual metaphor
An Empirical Evaluation of Visual Metaphors in the Animation of Roles of Variables

Informing Science The International Journal of an Emerging Transdiscipline