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  • Data Visualization State of the Industry, 2022

    April 5, 2023

    Topic

    Visualization  /  Data Visualization Society, industry, work

    The 2022 results from the State of the Industry survey, run by the Data Visualization Society, are out. Among 1,218 respondents, see the roles, the salaries, and the responsibilities:

    The overall median of the annual compensation graphs is at $60,000 to $79,999 per year, with very few respondents reporting over $159,000 per year, and a small but notable increase in the number of respondents reporting annual compensation in the $240,000 per year or more category.

    I’d have to look at the actual data, which you can get for this year and previous, but my hunch that the split distribution in salary is between non-tech and tech workers.

  • Physics of a bicycle visually explained

    April 4, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Bartosz Ciechanowski, bicycle, physics

    Riding a bicycle is a seemingly simple activity that we never forget how to do. However, the physics behind pedaling and movement is a balance between force and resistance. Bartosz Ciechanowski breaks it down in a visual essay filled with interactive demos.

    The structure of Ciechanowski’s essays are straightforward with the interactives doing a lot of the heavy-lifting for every concept. The physics are split into many small parts for ease of understanding. It makes me wonder about a data visualization equivalent to explain a complex dataset.

  • World water gap

    April 3, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  animation, National Geographic, water

    We tend to use more water than is available in the world, which as you can imagine, can be problematic. In a collaborative effort, National Geographic mapped the water gap since 1980:

    The result is a water gap in an increasing number of places. Humans are using more water than the water cycle can provide, and so we deplete shallow aquifers, and may need to tap into deep ones that will not be renewed in our lifetime. In the process we threaten not only our own health, peace, and well-being, but also the health of ecosystems and wildlife.

  • Mapping where Taylor Swift performs on stage during a show

    March 31, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  concert, Taylor Swift

    Taylor Swift is currently on tour. During a show, she sings 44 songs split up into 10 acts as she moves across a spectacle of a stage. A fan, who goes by vinoj, mapped Swift’s path and location as she performs every song, one map for each act.

  • Members Only

    Visualization Tools and Learning Resources – March 2023 Roundup

    March 30, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  roundup

    This is the good stuff for March.

  • Words used in layoff letters

    March 30, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  layoffs, letters, Washington Post

    Tech layoffs continue, and as companies deliver more letters, there are some repeated topics. For The Washington Post, Hamza Shaban, Luis Melgar, and Leslie Shapiro parsed out the patterns:

    The Post analyzed 48 publicly available memos from tech companies ranging from start-ups that have raised at least $50 million to trillion-dollar giants that have announced layoffs since last summer. Major themes and key words for each theme were determined after reviewing the memos. The Post programmatically split each memo into sentences and identified each sentence with a key word. Sentences were manually vetted to verify correct classification. A single sentence may be assigned multiple categories. Design elements are direct quotes from layoff memos with the exception of the first, where “Dear” was not necessarily used.

  • Visual explainer on what an AR-15 does to the human body

    March 29, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  damage, guns, shootings, Washington Post

    This is necessarily uncomfortable to go through, but for The Washington Post, N. Kirkpatrick, Atthar Mirza, and Manuel Canales show the bodily damage caused by an AR-15 bullet versus a 9mm round.

  • UC admission rates for California public and private high schools

    March 29, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  admissions, San Francisco Chronicle, University of California

    For the San Francisco Chronicle, Nami Sumida shows admission rates at University of California campuses, categorized by public and private high schools:

    Admissions for UCLA and Berkeley, the most competitive of the nine undergraduate UCs, follow a similar trend. Private school seniors were 20 percentage points more likely to apply to the two campuses than their peers at public schools. But unlike systemwide admissions, UCLA and Berkeley admitted public and private school students at about equal rates.

    You can download the full UC dataset, which dates back to the 1994 freshman college class. With time, and several categories, it seems like a fun dataset to poke at.

  • Among cities with the same name, which one people are probably talking about given their location

    March 28, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  cities, geography, Pudding, Russell Samora

    Throughout the United States, there are a surprising number of cities that have the same name. In fact, after playing with this interactive map by Russell Samora for The Pudding, it seems more likely that cities share a name with another than not. (Don’t quote me on that.)

    The question is: When someone mentions a city, which one are they talking about? Samora calculated the likelihoods, given the county that person lives in. For example, when someone refers to Buffalo, most people are probably talking about Buffalo, New York. If you live in Buffalo, Kentucky, then probably not.

    You can also mess around with your likelihood metric here.

    See also: street names across the country.

  • Online dating, who filters out what

    March 27, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  dating, Economist

    With online dating apps, you’re able to filter out potential matches based on characteristics like age and height. The Economist charted who’s filtering out what.

    The chart took me a second to figure out, but I think I got it. Each bubble represents a demographic group. The x-axis represents the percentage of potential matches the group filters out, and the y-axis represents a characteristic of the searching group. For example, you can see in the above that taller women filter out more people with the height filter, whereas taller men don’t filter out as much.

  • NYT switches to CDC data for their Covid dashboard

    March 24, 2023

    Topic

    Data Sharing  /  CDC, coronavirus, New York Times

    After three years, The New York Times is switching away from local data collection to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:

    As the virus began to spread rapidly in the United States in March 2020, it became clear that there was no single source that tracked infections at the local level. In the absence of comprehensive government data, The Times quickly built a custom system for gathering, vetting and publishing data from more than 100 state and local government sources.

    By collecting the data continually, and from multiple levels of government, The Times was able to map the spread of the virus, with updated information published several times a day.

    It’s sad that NYT had to collect data at all, but I’m glad they did. Those Covid pages were an invaluable resource those first two years.

  • Deforestation and increased risk of outbreaks

    March 24, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  deforestation, pandemic, ProPublica

    For ProPublica, Al Shaw, Irena Hwang, and Caroline Chen explain the increased risk of spreading disease when there are fewer trees and physical barriers in between people:

    The implications of such a drastic increase in mixing zone area over a relatively small increase in deforestation are serious. In 2018, a team led by Christina Faust, a researcher at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, developed a peer-reviewed model that directly links changes in forest cover to the potential for spillover events. To understand how the potential for spillover had changed since the 2013 outbreak, we applied data from real-world satellite images to this theoretical model.

    The dot plot and map combo at the end is a nice touch.

  • Members Only

    Narrow Audience

    March 23, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  audience

    With fewer people in mind, you can visualize data with fewer trade-offs and greater focus.

  • Data Underload  /  parenting, single

    Single Parents

    In the 1950s, less than 10% of families with children were single-parent. In 2022, among families with children, 31% were single-parent — more than three times as common.

    Read More
  • Fake sugars in your food

    March 23, 2023

    Topic

    Infographics  /  health, sugar, sweeteners, Washington Post

    For The Washington Post, Anahad O’Connor, Aaron Steckelberg, and Laura Reiley visually describe the use of artificial sweeteners in so-called healthy foods. Like with their piece on coffee versus tea, anthropomorphized food items take you through, which I very much enjoy.

  • Curiously timed stock trades by ultra-wealthy

    March 22, 2023

    Topic

    Statistics  /  investments, IRS, ProPublica, wealth

    Continuing an analysis of IRS records, Robert Faturechi and Ellis Simani for ProPublica delve into the timing of executives trading stock in partners and competitors:

    The Medpace executive is among dozens of top executives who have traded shares of either competitors or other companies with close connections to their own. A Gulf of Mexico oil executive invested in one partner company the day before it announced good news about some of its wells. A paper-industry executive made a 37% return in less than a week by buying shares of a competitor just before it was acquired by another company. And a toy magnate traded hundreds of millions of dollars in stock and options of his main rival, conducting transactions on at least 295 days. He made an 11% return over a recent five-year period, even as the rival’s shares fell by 57%.

  • Past and present California drought severity

    March 21, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  California, drought, Reuters

    It’s been raining a lot here in California, which is helpful, because most of the state has been in severe drought for the past few years. However, the current aging systems can only capture so much of the rainwater, which means we’re still in a drought. For Reuters, Clare Trainor and Minami Funakoshi use a combo heatmap and area plot to show drought severity over the years.

  • When spring is coming where you live

    March 20, 2023

    Topic

    Maps  /  spring, Washington Post, weather

    Going off the calendar, today is the first day of spring, but nature just goes off the weather. For The Washington Post, Harry Stevens mapped the early and late arrival of spring leaves across the country:

    This year’s winter weather pattern cleaved the country in half. As a ridge of high atmospheric pressure warmed the east, a low pressure system kept conditions cooler and wetter than usual across the west, said Michael A. Crimmins, a climate science professor at the University of Arizona.

    It’s like Punxsutawney Phil has no actual bearing on the arrival of spring.

  • Excess Kia and Hyundai car thefts

    March 17, 2023

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  Hyundai, Kia, theft, USAFacts

    In the middle of 2022, a popular video on TikTok, since taken down, showed how to easily start a Kia or Hyundai with a USB connector. The trend started a year earlier in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where hundreds of vehicles were stolen every month. USAFacts looked at how the trend spread to other cities.

  • Members Only

    Burning Out

    March 16, 2023

    Topic

    The Process  /  burnout

    Energy is finite. So is time.

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