Abstract
Treemaps may provide significant advantages over tabular data in corporate enterprise applications, due to their inherent ability to support users' integration of multiple dimensions of information. This study investigated the usability of treemaps for enterprise system administrators who monitor servers and web applications. Manipulated factors included hierarchy representation, data scale, and comparison with unsorted tables. The treemap hierarchy representations differed significantly in their support of the identification, comparison, and analysis tasks, but were significantly faster and more accurate than tabular data views. Treemap learnability was at least as successful as for tables. Performance differences between treemaps and tables increased with increasing size of datasets. Users' subjective ratings overwhelmingly supported treemaps over tabular data views. These results suggest that treemaps should be included as a standard graphical component in enterprise-level data analysis and monitoring applications.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
