frequencyhighlighting
Frequencyhighlighting is a data visualization and analysis technique that emphasizes elements in a dataset according to how often they occur. It is commonly applied to textual data to draw attention to frequently occurring words or phrases, but the concept also applies to numerical signals, categorical attributes, or event logs. In practice, a frequency table is computed, and a visualization or annotation is produced in which items with higher frequencies are given more prominent visual properties, such as larger size, stronger color, or bold styling. Thresholds or ranking schemes control which items are highlighted, and the visual mapping may be static or interactive, allowing users to adjust the emphasis dynamically.
In text analytics, frequencyhighlighting can help identify boilerplate language, domain-specific terminology, or trends over time when
Limitations include the risk of overemphasizing ubiquitous terms, bias introduced by the data sample, and the
Related concepts include term frequency–inverse document frequency (TF-IDF), word clouds, frequency plots, and interactive dashboards. While