Tamara Munzner Biography

Short Bio

Tamara Munzner is a Professor at the University of British Columbia Department of Computer Science, and holds a 2000 PhD from Stanford. She has been active in visualization research since 1991 and has published over ninety papers and chapters. She has been papers chair for IEEE InfoVis, EuroVis, and VIS, on the steering committees for InfoVis and BioVis, and the chair of the VIS Executive Committee. Her book Visualization Analysis and Design is widely used to teach visualization world-wide, and she is the co-editor of the A K Peters Visualization book series at CRC/Routledge. She received the IEEE VGTC Visualization Technical Achievement Award, multiple Test of Time Awards from InfoVis, and is an IEEE Fellow.

Medium Bio:

Tamara Munzner is a Professor of Computer Science at the University of British Columbia. She holds a PhD from Stanford, has been active in the visualization field for over 30 years, and has published over 80 papers. Her longstanding engagement with the IEEE VGTC community includes service as InfoVis, EuroVis, and VIS Papers Co-Chair, and chair of the VIS Restructuring Committee, the VIS Executive Committee, and the InfoVis Steering Committee. She published the book "Visualization Analysis and Design" in 2014 as the first in the AK Peters Visualization Series (CRC/Routledge), and continues as series editor. She received the IEEE VGTC Visualization Technical Achievement Award and is an IEEE Fellow.

Prior to UBC, she worked as a research scientist at the Compaq Systems Research Center in California and as technical staff at The Geometry Center at the University of Minnesota. She and her group have released over 25 software packages as open source. She has consulted for or collaborated with many companies including Agilent, AT&T Labs, Google, Microsoft, Mobify, Silicon Graphics, Tableau, Uber, and early-stage startups. She serves on the advisory boards for the Data Visualization Society and Data Literacy LLC. She has worked on problem-driven visualization in many domains including genomics, computational linguistics, web log analysis, and journalism. Her technique-driven visualization interests include graph drawing and dimensionality reduction. Her evaluation interests include controlled experiments in a laboratory setting and qualitative studies in the field.

Long Bio:

Tamara is a professor at the University of British Columbia, which she joined in 2002 after two years as a research scientist at the Compaq Systems Research Center. She earned her PhD from Stanford in 2000, working with Pat Hanrahan. She was a technical staff member at the University of Minnesota Geometry Center from 1991 to 1995. She was co-designer of the interactive 3D visualization system Geomview, which directly supported non-Euclidean geometries. She was co-creator of two animations that brought concepts from geometric topology to general audiences: "The Shape of Space" is about spaces that are finite but have no boundaries, and "Outside In" explores turning a sphere inside out. These videos were shown at the SIGGRAPH Electronic Theater, featured on the cover of Scientific American, and won awards at NICOGRAPH, the London Effects and Animation Festival, Prix Pixel Imagina, and Prix Ars Electronica. From 2000 to 2002, she worked as a research scientist at the Compaq Systems Research Center in California.

Tamara's research interests include the development, evaluation, and characterization of visualization systems and techniques from both problem-driven and technique-driven perspectives. In problem-driven work, known as design studies, the focus is on designing systems to solve specific needs for a target group of real-world users. Tamara has pioneered the development of design study methodology, reflecting on work within a broad range of application domains, including genomics, evolutionary biology, fisheries management, web log analysis, e-commerce, and journalism. Her technique-driven interests include graph drawing and dimensionality reduction, with an emphasis on scalable algorithms. Her evaluation interests include both controlled experiments in a laboratory setting and qualitative studies in the field. She has contributed substantially to the theoretical foundations of visualization design and the visualization research process. Her widely used book Visualization Analysis and Design provides a systematic, comprehensive framework for thinking about visualization in terms of principles and design choices. It features a unified approach encompassing information visualization techniques for the abstract data of tables and networks, scientific visualization techniques for spatial data, and visual analytics techniques for interweaving data transformation and analysis with interactive visual exploration.

Tamara has published over 90 papers, including 24 at IEEE InfoVis, and others at many venues including TVCG, VAST, EuroVis, SciVis, SIGGRAPH, CHI, Graphics Interface, PacificVis, Graph Drawing, Information Visualization, and CG&A. Her h-index is 50, her work has amassed over 13,000 citations, and she has given over 200 talks. She has supervised over 40 students and postdocs, who have gone on to positions including Google, Tableau Research, Electronic Arts, AeroInfo, and professorships at Zurich, Northeastern, Stuttgart, Utah, Victoria, and Beuth. She and her group have released over 25 software packages as open source. She has consulted for or collaborated with many companies including Agilent, AT&T Labs, Google, Microsoft, Mobify, Silicon Graphics, Tableau, Uber, and early-stage startups. She serves on the advisory boards for the Data Visualization Society and Data Literacy LLC. She is the co-editor of the AK Peters Visualization Series with CRC Press / Routledge.

Tamara has helped to organize InfoVis in roles ranging from webmaster to inaugural posters chair to papers chair to steering committee chair. She has served as chair of the VIS Executive Committee, chair of the VIS Restructuring Committee (reVISe), and a member of the VGTC Executive Committee. She was papers chair for EuroVis and a founding member of the BioVis Steering Committee. She received the IEEE VGTC Visualization Technical Achievement Award in 2015 and is a founding member of the VIS Academy and an IEEE Fellow. She has received three InfoVis 10-Year Test of Time awards, for her work on the nested model of visualization design and validation (2009), design study methodology (2012), and task abstractions (2013).

Tamara was born in 1969 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. She moved to Canada in 2002 and became a dual Canadian / American citizen in 2019. The artwork on the cover of her book is by her father Aribert Munzner.

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Tamara Munzner
Last modified: Fri Apr 12 18:54:25 PDT 2024