hartographers
Hartographers are practitioners who create maps of the heart’s structure, function, and its role in human experience by integrating imaging, electrophysiology, and data visualization. Clinically, hartography refers to three-dimensional maps of cardiac chambers, conduction pathways, and scar tissue used to guide procedures and diagnose disease. In humanities and design, the term is used metaphorically for studies of how the heart figures in emotion, culture, and behavior.
The term is not standardized and appears across disciplines that mix medicine, visualization, and the arts.
Common methods include electroanatomic mapping systems for electrophysiology, high-resolution MRI and CT, echocardiography, and computational modeling.
Applications range from planning ablation and device implantation to research into heart-brain interactions and autonomic regulation.
Education and professional landscape are interdisciplinary, drawing from cardiology, radiology, biomedical engineering, computer science, and the
Related topics include cardiology, medical imaging, electrophysiology, and emotional cartography.