Seeing Eye to AI? Applying Deep-Feature-Based Similarity Metrics to Information Visualization
Long, Sheng, Chatzimparmpas, Angelos, Alexander, Emma, Kay, Matthew, Hullman, Jessica
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Judging the similarity of visualizations is crucial to various applications, such as visualization-based search and visualization recommendation systems. Recent studies show deep-feature-based similarity metrics correlate well with perceptual judgments of image similarity and serve as effective loss functions for tasks like image super-resolution and style transfer. We explore the application of such metrics to judgments of visualization similarity. We extend a similarity metric using five ML architectures and three pre-trained weight sets. We replicate results from previous crowd-sourced studies on scatterplot and visual channel similarity perception. Notably, our metric using pre-trained ImageNet weights outperformed gradient-descent tuned MS-SSIM, a multi-scale similarity metric based on luminance, contrast, and structure. Our work contributes to understanding how deep-feature-based metrics can enhance similarity assessments in visualization, potentially improving visual analysis tools and techniques. Supplementary materials are available at https://osf.io/dj2ms.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Feb-28-2025
- Country:
- Europe (0.92)
- North America > United States
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area (0.46)
- Technology:
- Information Technology
- Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science (1.00)
- Machine Learning
- Neural Networks > Deep Learning (1.00)
- Statistical Learning (1.00)
- Representation & Reasoning (1.00)
- Vision (1.00)
- Communications (1.00)
- Sensing and Signal Processing > Image Processing (1.00)
- Artificial Intelligence
- Information Technology