The advent of compact, handheld devices has given us a pool of tracked movement data that could be used to infer trends and patterns that can be made to use. With this flooding of various trajectory data of animals, humans, vehicles, etc., the idea of ANALYTiC originated, using active learning to infer semantic annotations from the trajectories by learning from sets of labeled data. This study explores the application of dimensionality reduction and decision boundaries in combination with the already present active learning, highlighting patterns and clusters in data. We test these features with three different trajectory datasets with objective of exploiting the the already labeled data and enhance their interpretability. Our experimental analysis exemplifies the potential of these combined methodologies in improving the efficiency and accuracy of trajectory labeling. This study serves as a stepping-stone towards the broader integration of machine learning and visual methods in context of movement data analysis.