Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wei, Wei, Nacenta, Miguel A., Miranda, Michelle F., Perin, Charles
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.20080
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866915758627356672
author Wei, Wei
Nacenta, Miguel A.
Miranda, Michelle F.
Perin, Charles
author_facet Wei, Wei
Nacenta, Miguel A.
Miranda, Michelle F.
Perin, Charles
contents Finding a particular object in a display is important for viewers in many visualizations, for example, when reacting to brushing or to a highlighted object. This can be enabled by making the target object different in one of the visual variables that determine the object's appearance; for example, by changing its color or size. Certain interpretations of the visual search literature have promoted the view that using visual variables such as hue-often labeled as preattentive-would make the target object automatically "popout," implying that an object can be located almost instantly, regardless of the number of objects in the display. In this paper we present a study that serves as a bridge between the extensive visual search literature and visualization, establishing empirical base measurements for the localization task. By testing displays with up to hundreds of objects, we are able to show that none of the common visual variables is immune to the increase in the number of objects. We also provide the first empirically informed comparisons between visual variables for this task in the context of visualization, and show how different visual variables have varying robustness with respect to two additional dimensions: the location of the target and the overall visual arrangement (layout). A free copy of this paper and all supplemental materials are available on our online repository: https://osf.io/z68ak/overview.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_20080
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Locatability and Locatability Robustness of Visual Variables in Single Target Localization
Wei, Wei
Nacenta, Miguel A.
Miranda, Michelle F.
Perin, Charles
Human-Computer Interaction
Finding a particular object in a display is important for viewers in many visualizations, for example, when reacting to brushing or to a highlighted object. This can be enabled by making the target object different in one of the visual variables that determine the object's appearance; for example, by changing its color or size. Certain interpretations of the visual search literature have promoted the view that using visual variables such as hue-often labeled as preattentive-would make the target object automatically "popout," implying that an object can be located almost instantly, regardless of the number of objects in the display. In this paper we present a study that serves as a bridge between the extensive visual search literature and visualization, establishing empirical base measurements for the localization task. By testing displays with up to hundreds of objects, we are able to show that none of the common visual variables is immune to the increase in the number of objects. We also provide the first empirically informed comparisons between visual variables for this task in the context of visualization, and show how different visual variables have varying robustness with respect to two additional dimensions: the location of the target and the overall visual arrangement (layout). A free copy of this paper and all supplemental materials are available on our online repository: https://osf.io/z68ak/overview.
title Locatability and Locatability Robustness of Visual Variables in Single Target Localization
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.20080