Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rogers, Jen, Akbaba, Derya, Scott-Brown, James, Lex, Alexander, Meyer, Miriah
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14417
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866908967839465472
author Rogers, Jen
Akbaba, Derya
Scott-Brown, James
Lex, Alexander
Meyer, Miriah
author_facet Rogers, Jen
Akbaba, Derya
Scott-Brown, James
Lex, Alexander
Meyer, Miriah
contents Decades of advocacy for reproducibility and replication have advanced open, transparent practices in the sciences. However, traditional notions of reproducibility fit poorly with design-oriented visualization research, where insights emerge through subjective, situated, and iterative work. So how can we ensure rigor and transparency in processes that are inherently unreproducible? To introduce transparency in design-oriented research, we propose to focus on traceability: surfacing the origin and development of research contributions based on rich sets of artifacts documenting the design process. We investigated traceability through a collaborative autoethnographic reflection that builds on several years of work exploring ways to make design-oriented research transparent. This exploration includes an experiment to build a tool to support traceability, which we called tRRRacer. The tRRRacer tool provided a testbed for us to operationalize the three tenets of a traceable process: (1) Record abundant, annotated artifacts representative of research activities; (2) Report curated research threads that articulate rationale and evolution of the process, allowing others to (3) Read via interfaces that help retrace claims and assess plausibility. Reflecting on our experiences, we contribute a theorization of traceability and reflections on how we might support it.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_14417
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Reflections on Traceability for Visualization Research
Rogers, Jen
Akbaba, Derya
Scott-Brown, James
Lex, Alexander
Meyer, Miriah
Human-Computer Interaction
Decades of advocacy for reproducibility and replication have advanced open, transparent practices in the sciences. However, traditional notions of reproducibility fit poorly with design-oriented visualization research, where insights emerge through subjective, situated, and iterative work. So how can we ensure rigor and transparency in processes that are inherently unreproducible? To introduce transparency in design-oriented research, we propose to focus on traceability: surfacing the origin and development of research contributions based on rich sets of artifacts documenting the design process. We investigated traceability through a collaborative autoethnographic reflection that builds on several years of work exploring ways to make design-oriented research transparent. This exploration includes an experiment to build a tool to support traceability, which we called tRRRacer. The tRRRacer tool provided a testbed for us to operationalize the three tenets of a traceable process: (1) Record abundant, annotated artifacts representative of research activities; (2) Report curated research threads that articulate rationale and evolution of the process, allowing others to (3) Read via interfaces that help retrace claims and assess plausibility. Reflecting on our experiences, we contribute a theorization of traceability and reflections on how we might support it.
title Reflections on Traceability for Visualization Research
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14417