A technical error in one of the diagrams: Hall effect sensors are not binary, but one-dimensional, and are used so; their output voltage is directly proportional to the magnetic field strength. As for PIR sensors, fundamentally they’re certainly not binary, but I have no idea if they perhaps expose only a binary signal. A better example of a binary sensor might be an on/off switch.
analog PIR is typically a differential signal between two receivers. The receivers are placed behind a fresnel lens (where the lenses are designed to point into each of the sensors). So when an IR source (like a person) walks in front of the sensor it creates a large spike, because they are being compared against a low IR area.
There is a form of PIR sensing where it behaves like a thermal camera at a very low resolution (sometimes as low as 2x2 pixels)