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  • Heatmap shows deaths by age in different countries

    December 5, 2018

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  age, mortality

    This interactive heatmap by Jonas Schöley shows mortality rates by age. Just use the dropdown menu to see the data for various countries. You can also compare male and female populations and countries.

    As you might expect, you can see mortality rates decrease steadily, especially in the younger ages. Spikes or abrupt color changes might indicate war or disease. [via @maartenzam]

  • How to Make an Interactive Map of Geographic Paths

    With latitude and longitude coordinates, there are a number of ways to map geographic data using D3.js and Leaflet.

  • Same facts but different stories, an illustration

    December 4, 2018

    Topic

    Infographics  /  point of view

    Multiple people can look at the same dataset and come out the other end with very different interpretations. [via @SteveStuWill]

  • Blockchain mapping

    December 4, 2018

    Topic

    Data Sharing  /  blockchain, GPS

    Shannon Mattern for The Atlantic on how blockchain might be useful in mapping and as a replacement for GPS:

    Crypto-cartographers hope to use it for spatial verification—confirming that things are where they say they are, when they claim to be there. How might this be useful? Well, you could know precisely when an Amazon delivery drone drops a package on your doorstep, at which point the charge would post to your account. No more unscrupulous delivery drivers, and no more contested charges for packages lost in transit. Or when opening a new bank account, you could virtually confirm your permanent address by physically being there during a particular verification period, rather than providing copies of your utility bills. You could also submit a photo of your flooded basement or smashed windshield to your insurance company, supplementing your claim with time- and location-verified documentation. Or, as you pass by your local family-owned coffee shop, the owner could “airdrop” some Bitcoin coupons to your phone, and you could stop by to cash in before the offer expires a half hour later.

    Oh good.

  • A visualization book using only hand-drawn illustrations

    December 3, 2018

    Topic

    Design  /  book, hand-drawn, illustration

    RJ Andrews has a visualization design book coming out in January called Info We Trust. He hand-drew about 300 graphics for the book. One of the reasons:

    I decided very early that Info We Trust would not use any existing images, mine or others. Found examples work fine for certain books. They are also convenient, the work is already done! But found images bring baggage too. You might choose an existing work to highlight one aspect of its design. But the reader will see other facets too.

    I’m intrigued. On the upside, you get a consistent visual flow. A focused point of view. On the downside: the possibility of a view that is too focused. I have a feeling there will be more upside than downside. [Amazon pre-order]

  • Defining visualization literacy

    November 30, 2018

    Topic

    Visualization  /  literacy, research

    Michael Correll on the use of “visualization literacy” in research:

    If people (and, by some definitions, many or even most people) are chart illiterates, then we may feel tempted to write those groups off. We may prioritize the design of visualizations to help the creators of, say, machine learning models, from whom we can presume a sufficient level of visual and statistical literacy, rather than the populations who may be impacted by these models (sometimes unjustly). If what we mean by “visualization literacy” is narrow enough, or rare enough, then we’re already setting ourselves mental upper bounds for the number of people we’ll impact with our work.

    This was an interesting perspective. I’m used to listening to or reading from people on the presentation side of visualization, in which case it’s your job to raise literacy. You should imagine what others are thinking and explain any points of possible confusion with annotation and intuitive visual encodings.

    Don’t ever use “people won’t understand it” as a crutch.

  • Teaching kids data visualization

    November 29, 2018

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  kids, teaching

    Jonathan Schwabish gave his fourth-grade son’s class a lesson on data visualization. He wrote about his experience:

    I’d love to see a way to make data visualization education a broader part of the curriculum, both on its own and linked with their math and other classes. Imagine adding different shapes to maps in their Social Studies classes to encode data or using waterfall charts in their math classes to visually demonstrate a simple mathematical equation or developing simple network diagrams in science class. The combination of the scientific approach to data visualization and the creativity it sparks could serve as a great way to help students learn.

    Maybe I should introduce Schwabish’s Match It Game to the Yau household. My five-year-old has been asking why I keep “doing data.”

  • Members Only

    Data Tools and Resources Roundup, November 2018

    November 29, 2018

    Topic

    The Process  /  roundup

    Throughout the month I collect new tools for data and visualization and additional resources on designing data graphics. Here’s the new stuff for November.

  • Lessons from posting a fake map about pies

    November 28, 2018

    Topic

    Mistaken Data  /  fake, humor, viral

    Brian Brettschneider made a joke map randomly designating the favorite pies of certain areas. While intended as a joke and a parody of past “favorite” maps, some people took it too seriously — like Senator Ted Cruz. Brettschneider describes the lessons he learned:

    Maps hold a special standing among the public. We tend to place very high value in maps as holders of accurate information. If it’s in a map, it must be true, right? If I had tweeted a joke list of favorite pies by region, it would be very quickly ignored. Since it was in map form, it had an air of authenticity. This matters. As cartographers, we need to be cognizant of the power that maps have.

    I had a similar experience years ago with Data Underload. These days I use the project as a catch-all for my own analyses, but I started it as a comic-ish chart series that I used to communicate anecdotes, opinions, and random stuff based on no actual data.

    The form confused people at times, especially for those unfamiliar with the series, because it looked so much like charts based on real data. It was like reading a sarcastic comment online from someone you don’t know and trying to guess if it’s serious or not.

    So now I keep the real-looking charts for real data unless it’s super obvious. Sometimes your choices on form can lead to unintended interpretations — like a joke taken as serious commentary.

  • Data Underload  /  dating, marriage

    Peak Non-Creepy Dating Pool

    Based on the “half-your-age-plus-seven” rule, the range of people you can date expands with age. Combine that with population counts and demographics, and you can find when your non-creepy dating pool peaks.

    Read More
  • Skewed mental map of the world’s geography

    November 26, 2018

    Topic

    Maps  /  cartography, mental

    The maps that we imagine as we think about locations around the world often don’t match up with reality. Betsy Mason for National Geographic explains the discrepancy. On the misalignment of Europe:

    Europe is also often placed much farther south on mental maps than it really is, appearing directly across the Atlantic from the contiguous United States. But it actually lines up better with Canada: Paris is further north than Montreal, Barcelona is at a similar latitude as Chicago, and Venice lines up with Portland, Oregon.

    …and the world as we knew it was never the same again.

  • Years of life lost due to breathing bad air

    November 21, 2018

    Topic

    Infographics  /  environment, mortality, pollution, Washington Post

    Researchers at the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute estimated the number of years lost and the number of people affected due to particulate matter in the air. They estimated per country. The Washington Post used a mosaic plot, aka a Marimekko chart, to show the differences.

    The width of each column represents total population for a country. The sections in each columns represent the number of people who will lose a certain number of years. Color represents average years of life lost.

    These charts are often a bit confusing at first glance, but the scrolling format used here provides some guidance.

  • Members Only

    Tools I Am Thankful for That Make Data Work Easier

    November 21, 2018

    Topic

    The Process  /  Thanksgiving

    In the spirit of the holidays, here are the tools I am most thankful for. Without them, work would be much more tedious and painful.

  • City road maps made into solvable mazes

    November 20, 2018

    Topic

    Data Art  /  maze, roads

    Michelle Chandra uses street data as a base for solvable mazes:

    I draw each maze map by hand using the real street data of cities. In keeping with the fun nature of my art, I choose iconic city landmarks for the start and end of each maze – landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge, Coney Island, or the Santa Monica Pier. All my maze maps are tested with friends and family to make sure they are, well, challenging to solve!

    Grab a screen print here. Each one comes with an extra sheet to solve for yourself.

  • Color distribution in campaign logos

    November 19, 2018

    Topic

    Infographics  /  color, election, Washington Post

    In news graphics, blue typically represents Democrat and red represents Republican. However, the definition isn’t so clear-cut by actual party usage. Chris Alcantara for The Washington Post broke it down in 900 campaign logos used during the recent midterms. Each strip represents a logo.

  • Neural networks to generate music

    November 19, 2018

    Topic

    Statistics  /  music, neural network

    Kyle McDonald describes some of the history and current research on using algorithms to generate music. On how David Cope incorporated Markov chains to aid in his work:

    In 1981 David Cope began working with algorithmic composition to solve his writers block. He combined Markov chains and other techniques (musical grammars and combinatorics) into a semi-automatic system he calls Experiments in Musical Intelligence, or Emmy. David cites Iannis Xenakis and Lejaren Hiller (Illiac Suite 1955, Experimental Music 1959) as early inspirations, and he describes Emmy in papers, patents, and even source code on GitHub. Emmy is most famous for learning from and imitating other composers.

    I expected samples to sound robotic and unnatural, and some are, but some are quite pleasant to listen to.

  • Book of hand-painted ski maps

    November 16, 2018

    Topic

    Maps  /  paintings, skiing

    When you go skiing or snowboarding, you get a map of the mountain that shows the terrain and where you can go. James Niehues is the man behind many of these hand-painted ski maps around the world, and he has a kickstarter to catalog his life’s work.

    This is kind of amazing. I went skiing a lot as a kid, and I have distinct memories of these maps. I would stand at the top of the mountain, rip off one of my gloves with my teeth, and then pull out a folded map from a zipped pocket. I never knew they were by the same man, but in retrospect, it makes sense.

  • Inflated counts for cleared rape cases

    November 16, 2018

    Topic

    Infographics  /  law, police, ProPublica, rape

    Newsy, Reveal and ProPublica look into rape cases in the U.S. and law enforcement’s use of exceptional clearance.

    The designation allows police to clear cases when they have enough evidence to make an arrest and know who and where the suspect is, but can’t make an arrest for reasons outside their control. Experts say it’s supposed to be used sparingly.

    Culled data from various police departments shows the designation is used more often that one would expect.

  • Where Camp fire destroyed homes

    November 16, 2018

    Topic

    Maps  /  Los Angeles Times, wildfire

    The Camp fire death toll rose to 63 and 631 missing as of yesterday. The Los Angeles Times provides some graphics showing scale and the buildings that burned.

    Ugh. I live a few hundred miles away and the smoke is bad enough that my son’s school is closed today. It has not been a good year for California in terms of wildfires.

  • Members Only

    Uses for Animation in Charts and Animating Your Own Data

    November 15, 2018

    Topic

    The Process  /  animation

    Important question: Is animation in visualization even worthwhile? Well, it depends. Surprise, surprise. In this issue, I look at animation in data visualization, its uses, and how I like to think about it when I implement moving data.

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