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dc.contributor.advisorFox, Amy Rae
dc.contributor.advisorSatyanarayan, Arvind
dc.contributor.authorHua, Dana
dc.date.accessioned2025-09-18T14:28:06Z
dc.date.available2025-09-18T14:28:06Z
dc.date.issued2025-05
dc.date.submitted2025-06-23T14:02:15.665Z
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/162702
dc.description.abstractResearch in public data communication typically focuses on improving the processes of encoding and decoding, answering the question of how to design a visualization to best communicate information to an audience. However, by treating visual communications as simply conduits for information, we ignore an important aspect of how people interact with communications. We ignore the attitudes – the thoughts, feelings, and intentions toward action – a person may form from communicative artifacts based on their personal values and experiences. Recent research has demonstrated that—much like natural language—readers of visualizations make social attributions: inferences about the identities and characteristics of an artifact’s makers, modes of distribution, and tools of production. In this thesis, I contribute a method to systematically map the visualization attitudes of an individual and the associated ideologies of their sociocultural group, by adapting the repertory grid technique from clinical psychology, to the context of data visualization. I demonstrate the effectiveness of this mixed methods approach by eliciting both the attitudes towards a visualization most salient to an individual, and the design features of the visualization that inform each attitude. This method offers a new way of exploring the content and latent structure of visualization attitudes, which opens new avenues for socioculturally-informed and intervention-driven research in data visualization.
dc.publisherMassachusetts Institute of Technology
dc.rightsIn Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
dc.rightsCopyright retained by author(s)
dc.rights.urihttps://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/
dc.titleEliciting Visualization Attitudes with Repertory Grids
dc.typeThesis
dc.description.degreeM.Eng.
dc.contributor.departmentMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
mit.thesis.degreeMaster
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Engineering in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science


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