Publication | Open Access
Assessing the Effect of Visualizations on Bayesian Reasoning through Crowdsourcing
164
Citations
43
References
2012
Year
Artificial IntelligenceEngineeringVisualization (Graphics)CognitionBayesian ReasoningWay Bayesian ProblemsSocial SciencesInteractive VisualizationData ScienceContent AnalysisHuman ComputationStatisticsVisual AnalyticsCognitive ScienceTextual Bayesian ProblemCrowdsourcingCrowd ComputingBayesian StatisticsDiagrammatic ReasoningVisual ReasoningHuman-computer Interaction
People have difficulty understanding statistical information and are unaware of their wrong judgments, particularly in Bayesian reasoning. Psychology studies suggest that the way Bayesian problems are represented can impact comprehension, but few visual designs have been evaluated and only populations with a specific background have been involved. In this study, a textual and six visual representations for three classic problems were compared using a diverse subject pool through crowdsourcing. Visualizations included area-proportional Euler diagrams, glyph representations, and hybrid diagrams combining both. Our study failed to replicate previous findings in that subjects' accuracy was remarkably lower and visualizations exhibited no measurable benefit. A second experiment confirmed that simply adding a visualization to a textual Bayesian problem is of little help, even when the text refers to the visualization, but suggests that visualizations are more effective when the text is given without numerical values. We discuss our findings and the need for more such experiments to be carried out on heterogeneous populations of non-experts.
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