About: Bubble chart is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 22 publications have been published within this topic receiving 472 citations. The topic is also known as: bubble charts.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a set of control functions that can be selectively activated by input to the processor for creating at least one subset of the sales transaction information, a plurality of graphical representations that are generated based on the selected subset of sales transactions, and displaying at least a graphical representation of the plurality of the graphical representations on an electronic display associated with the processor.
Abstract: A computer implemented sales transaction tool and associated method of use is disclosed. This includes at least one processor configured to receive sales transaction information and programmed to provide the following functionality: a series of control functions that can be selectively activated by input to the processor for creating at least one subset of the sales transaction information, a plurality of graphical representations that are generated based on the selected subset of sales transaction information, and displaying at least one graphical representation of the plurality of graphical representations on an electronic display associated with the processor. Graphical representations of sales transaction information may include a slope and scatter diagram of sales transaction information, a waterfall chart, waterfall transactional analysis, a time series chart, a price sensor, a margin sensor, a break-even analysis graph and a bubble chart. There are graphical representations to evaluate opportunity of moving low margin products to average margins of comparable products and determining value for products having a single customer.
TL;DR: A scientometric and content analysis of the studies in the field of e‐learning that were published in five Social Science Citation Index journals and two conferences from 2003 to 2008 to realize hidden research trends using an internally built visualization tool.
Abstract: Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to provide a scientometric and content analysis of the studies in the field of e‐learning that were published in five Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) journals (Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, Computers & Education, British Journal of Educational Technology, Innovations in Education and Teaching International and Educational Technology Research and Development) and two conferences (Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia & Telecommunications and IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies) from 2003 to 2008 to realize hidden research trends using an internally built visualization toolDesign/methodology/approach – The 7,759 original papers gathered from five journals and two conferences were further classified in 14 main research areas based on 150 concepts clusters The internally built visualization tool, which is primarily based on animated bubble chart and pie chart, facilitated the task of analyzing the trends of contributions in the fi
TL;DR: Evaluated knowledge, understanding, and use of the bubble chart by 85 mothers living in a rural area of central Mexico showed an increase between pre-intervention and post-interventions, with a statistically significant increase in knowledge, interpretation, and application.
Abstract: The bubble chart is a growth chart that has a vertical layout rather than the more common horizontal one, and bubbles instead of cries-crossing lines. The present project aimed to evaluate knowledg...
TL;DR: The Immersive Bubble Chart is introduced, a visualization for hierarchical datasets presented in a virtual reality (VR) world and users get immersed into the visualization and interact with the bubbles using gestures with a view to overcoming some limitations of 2D visualizations.
Abstract: In this paper, we introduce the Immersive Bubble Chart, a visualization for hierarchical datasets presented in a virtual reality (VR) world. Users get immersed into the visualization and interact with the bubbles using gestures with a view to overcoming some limitations of 2D visualizations due to the capabilities and interaction affordances of the devices. The technological advances in VR give the possibility to design malleable and extensible representations and more natural and engaging interactions. Using the Oculus Touch controllers, the users can grab and move the bubbles, throw them away or bump two of them for creating a cluster. We have tested the Immersive Bubble Chart with the hierarchical clusters of semantically related terms generated from Twitter.
TL;DR: The association between the adherence rate and survival indicated significant improvements for stage III patients compared with stage I patients, and a graphical representation of bubble charts helped to monitor physician performance, which improved the adherence rates to quality-of-care guidelines for colorectal cancer patients.
Abstract: This study examines whether a higher rate of physician adherence to quality-of-care indicators for colorectal cancer patients is associated with improved survival and using a bubble chart to help interpret physician performance. A set of 13 core measures was used to evaluate the quality of care in 708 colorectal cancer patients treated from 2004 to 2007 at a hospital in Taiwan. A 100% adherence standard was used to measure the relationship of adherence to patient survival. Each indicator assigned by each cancer stage was dichotomously coded. The associations between the adherence and survival rates and demographic characteristics were assessed using Cox's proportional hazard regression. Physician adherence to core indicators was plotted using a bubble chart to motivate physicians' performance adhering to quality-of-care guidelines for colorectal cancer patients. The 100% adherence rate criterion contributed to a relatively low hazard ratio of 0.36 (95% confidence interval, 0.14-0.85; P= 0.02). The association between the adherence rate and survival indicated significant improvements for stage III patients compared with stage I patients. A graphical representation of bubble charts helped to monitor physician performance, which improved the adherence rate to quality-of-care guidelines for colorectal cancer patients.