Los puntos clave no están disponibles para este artículo en este momento.
In digital humanities (DH) and cultural heritage (CH), visualization-based storytelling (VBS) has become an important approach for structuring, interpreting, and communicating cultural data and research results. The specific characteristics of these domains – historically oriented data, high levels of semantic ambiguity and uncertainty, interpretive rather than purely analytical goals, and deep expertise in narrative theory and practice – create both distinct requirements for VBS design and distinct opportunities that existing frameworks and tools only partially address. Yet the body of work that has emerged in response to these requirements remains scattered across disciplines and venues, with no systematic account of current practice and no consolidated view of open challenges.Against this backdrop, we survey DH and CH work on story designs and VBS tools to identify trends and recurring patterns, promising practices, and open challenges. We contribute by (1) synthesizing storytelling design spaces into a framework tailored to VBS in DH and CH, (2) mapping existing approaches to generate a field-level picture of practices and gaps, and (3) highlighting future areas of concern and inquiry for VBS in relation to domain-specific epistemic questions. Overall, this survey seeks to consolidate an emerging community of practice and offer a shared analytical foundation for future research and design.
Kusnick et al. (Wed,) studied this question.