π΄ Journeys¶
J001: Create New Visualli¶
J002: View Visualli¶
This highlights the "core visual elements" that elevate any visual into Visualli.
Structure: Macro to Micro
Visual Effects:
β¨Z-Axis Nestinguses depth to show that a sub-topic is literally "inside" or "below" its parent topic, reinforcing the mental model of containment.
β¨Gradual Revealhas two parts.
1. A continuous "forward-zoom" zoom until node until the focal node saturates its boundaries exceed the viewport, seamlessly transitioning into the node's internal content as the new primary view.
2. A continuous "reverse-zoom" that "collapses" the environment back into a single node.
β¨Chromatic Immersion: The node expands to become the background, signaling that the user is "inside" the bubble.
β¨Magnitude Markerssignal the density of a node via a numerical badge, allowing users to gauge the topic before diving deep.
β¨Semantic Peekshows briefly a "mini-summary" as the user hovers over an entry to provide instant context
β¨Semantic Anchorshows in-situ definitions for key terminology via a dotted-underline highlight and hover-triggered modal, allowing learners to bridge "Knowledge Gaps" without losing their pace.
β¨Breadcrumbingshows a trail of previously visited layers to reduce the cognitive load of navigation
J003: Visualli Archetypes¶
Beyond the "core visual elements" above, Visualli Archetypes act as plug-in mental models that help you synthesize, arrange, and showcase information in ways that stick.
Leveraging The LATCH Framework, developed by Richard Saul Wurman (Founder of TED), which argues there are only five-ways to organize any information.
- L(ocation)
- A(lphabet)
- T(ime)
- C(ategory)
- H(ierarchy)
A. Location¶
This caters to "spatial and geographic" data to show Proximity, Orientation, and Contextual Relationships
Structure: 2D-Coordinate Maps, Anatomical Overlays etc
Visual Effects:
β¨Heatmappinguses color intensity to show "density" of information or activity within a specific spatial zone<
B. Alphabet¶
This caters to "reference and indexical" data to show "fast retrieval of known terms"
Structure: Linear Lists, A to Z Indexing etc
Visual Effects:
β¨Focal Highlightinguses "pop-out" effect where the current term is enlarged or illuminated, using the Von Restorff Effect to grab attention
β¨Kinetic Scrollinguses smooth momentum-based movement through the list to provide a tactile sense of the dataset's volume<
C. Time¶
This caters to "temporal and sequential" data to show "progression, causality, and evolution" over time.
Structure: Linear Timelines, Cyclical Loops, Branching Choice Trees etc
Visual Effects:
β¨Particle Trailswhich are tiny animated dashed lines that travel along the edges between nodes in the direction of the flow
β¨Temporal Compressionenables "pinch-to-zoom" into a specific moment or zoom out to see the big picture, maintaining the same visual archetype at different scales
D. Category¶
This caters to "relational and qualitative" data to show "similarity, clustering, and shared attributes"
Structure: The Web (network), Venn Diagrams, Clusters (Groups), Thematic Webs
Visual Effects:
β¨Chromatic Weightinguses distinct "Color Families" to group similar nodes
β¨Pulsing/Glowwhere when one category is hovered on (or) long-touched, all related nodes pulse to show hidden similarities
β¨Gravity Wellswhere nodes with more "connections" physically pull other nodes closer to them in the UI, visually representing the centrality of an idea<
E. Hierarchy¶
This caters to "quantitative and organizational" data to show "scale, ranking, authority, and magnitude"
Structure: The Tree, Nested Containers (Russian Dolls), The Scale/Continuum, Pyramids
Visual Effects:
β¨Scale-Proportional Sizinguses physical size of a node to correlate directly to its relative value (e.g., a "Major Concept" node is 2x larger than a "Minor Detail" node)