A picture is worth a thousand words. Visualization and graphics both encompass the art and science of producing images that capture the complexity, intricacy, and beauty of real-world datasets. With good visualization, an evolutionary biologist can easily make sense of the rich ancestral relationships in plant genomes. A geologist uses computer graphics to see the structure of caves that would be physically inaccessible to her. A programmer visualizing the execution of her code can quickly pinpoint a problem with a parallel program running on thousands of machines. Computer graphics research seeks to improve the fundamental techniques by which we can create and manipulate visual content. Visualization research creates novel algorithms and interaction techniques that make data accessible to experts, and to the broader public as well.
Both visualization and graphics are unique in that they combine core CS research with a variety of other fields such as perceptual psychology, art, design, and statistics. This research frequently offers opportunities for interdisciplinary collaborations to solve exciting problems with real world applications. Our group, the HDC lab (https://hdc.cs.arizona.edu), includes world-class expertise in graph drawing, large data and systems visualization, topological data analysis, performance visualization, geometry processing, GPU techniques, physically-based animation, data structures for interactive data analysis at scale, and flow visualization.
Please refer to the personal webpages for the faculty in this area for the most up to date details on recent publications and awards.
Josh Levine's personal page
Visualization and Graphics Faculty
Ehsan Azimi
Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer EngineeringOffice: ECE 230
Interests: Human-AI Interaction, Extended Reality (including Augmented, Virtual, and Mixed Reality), Robotics, Digital Twins, Human-Computer Interaction, and Digital Health
(PhD, Johns Hopkins University)
Josh Levine
Associate ProfessorOffice: GS 754
Interests: Visualization, geometric modeling, topological analysis, mesh generation, and computer graphics.
(Ph.D., Ohio State University, 2009)
PhD Students
Tanner Finken
PhD StudentOffice: GS 756
Interests: Data Visualization, Topology
Advisor: Dr. Josh Levine
Emiliano Islas
PhD StudentOffice: GS 756
Interests: Machine Learning, Computer Vision and Graphics, Model Selection, Surrogate Modeling
Advisors: Dr. Josh Levine
Harshita Narnoli
PhD StudentOffice: GS 725
Interests: Computer vision, Computer Graphics and Machine Learning
Advisor: TBD
Shreya Nupur Shakya
PhD StudentOffice: GS TBD
Interests: Data visualization and Graphics
Advisor: TBD