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  • U.S. still the outlier for gun homicide rate

    May 25, 2022

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  guns, homicide

    This chart from The New York Times, based on estimates from Our World In Data and World Bank, shows GDP per capita against gun homicide rates. The United States stands alone. Why.

  • Children exposed to school shootings

    May 25, 2022

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  school, shootings, Washington Post

    The Washington Post maintains a database of school shootings (which is sad in itself that such a thing has to exist) to keep record of tragedy that the U.S. government does not track. They calculated the number of kids since Columbine who were exposed to such terrible events:

    The Washington Post spent a year determining how many children have been affected by school shootings, beyond just those killed or injured. To do that, reporters attempted to identify every act of gunfire at a primary or secondary school during school hours since the Columbine High massacre on April 20, 1999. Using Nexis, news articles, open-source databases, law enforcement reports, information from school websites and calls to schools and police departments, The Post reviewed more than 1,000 alleged incidents but counted only those that happened on campuses immediately before, during or just after classes.

    The events are terrible when they happen, and they go on to affect thousands of others for a lifetime — kids who were just going on with their daily activities.

  • Final texts

    May 25, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  coronavirus, New York Times, texting

    Alicia P.Q. Wittmeyer, for NYT Opinion, approached the one-million mark for Covid deaths with text messages. The piece starts on February 29, 2020, when the first person died because of Covid. The count to 1 million begins, and a recurring ticker reminds you of the increase over time. Thirteen text message threads between someone who died and a person who cared remind you that the numbers are real.

  • Shrinking war mapped

    May 24, 2022

    Topic

    Maps  /  Russia, Ukraine, war

    The war in Ukraine continues, but the scale and objects appear to have changed over time. Josh Holder, Marco Hernandez, and Jon Huang for The New York Times mapped the shrinking scope as Russia loses more soldiers and resources.

  • Generative sea creatures

    May 24, 2022

    Topic

    Data Art  /  animals, generative art, Marcin Ignac

    Cindermedusae by Marcin Ignac is “a generative encyclopedia of imaginary sea creatures.” I’m into the aesthetic.

  • Lives cut short by Covid

    May 23, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  coronavirus, mortality, Washington Post

    Alyssa Fowers and Leslie Shapiro, for The Washington Post, used the stories of 114 individuals to show weekly Covid deaths. Each story is “cut short”, making the length of each fragment match counts for the corresponding week.

    My brain was slightly confused by the metaphor at first. The lower the count, the more an individual’s story is cut short, but my intuition expected that more deaths would mean stories were cut short more.

    That said, the sentiment is in the right place. Maybe the stories didn’t need to be tied to weekly counts? I’m imagining something closer to Periscopic’s piece from 2013 on lives cut short by guns.

  • Members Only

    This Time With Purpose

    May 20, 2022

    Topic

    The Process  /  purpose

    Without purpose, there isn’t a whole lot to grasp on.

  • Nuclear winter explained visually

    May 20, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Neil Halloran, nuclear, RAND

    [arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzpIsjgapAk” /]

    Neil Halloran, known for his documentary films that lean strongly on data visualization, collaborated with RAND to explain the possibility (or lack) of a nuclear winter. In the last third of the film, Halloran also discusses the pursuit of absolute truth and whether it’s truly worth it in the end. Lots to think about.

  • R packages useful for sports analytics

    May 20, 2022

    Topic

    Software  /  package, R, sports

    If you’re into R and analyzing sports data, you’ll want to save this CRAN task view:

    This CRAN Task View contains a list of packages useful for sports analytics. Most of the packages are sport-specific and are grouped as such. However, we also include a General section for packages that provide ancillary functionality relevant to sports analytics (e.g., team-themed color palettes), and a Modeling section for packages useful for statistical modeling. Throughout the task view, and collected in the Related links section at the end, we have included a list of selected books and articles that use some of these packages in substantive ways. Our goal in compiling this list is to help researchers find the tools they need to complete their work in R.

  • A color tool for accessible schemes

    May 19, 2022

    Topic

    Apps  /  accessibility, color, Leonardo

    Leonardo is an open source project from Adobe that helps you pick accessible colors. There’s a JavaScript API along with a browser tool that lets you select colors interactively.

    Color is a common encoding to visualize data. It can be used directly in choropleth maps or heatmaps, indirectly as a redundant encoding, it can be decorative, and it can be used for all the things in between. However, a color scheme doesn’t work if a big chunk of your audience is not able to see the differences. So it’s good to see these sorts of tools available.

    Leonardo is an extension of Chroma.js. Gregor’s Chroma.js palette helper is still my go-to to keep color schemes in check.

  • Behind the million

    May 18, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  coronavirus, mortality, scale, Washington Post

    Sergio Peçanha and Yan Wu, for The Washington Post, used a combination unit chart with individual icons to represent the scale and weight of the near million Covid deaths in the United States.

    Compare this with NYT’s particle-based charts and Axios’ scaled squares. It’s kind of in between the two in level of abstraction, but all three carry similar messages, with a focus on the one-million mark.

  • Statistical personality quiz matches you to fictional characters

    May 17, 2022

    Topic

    Statistics  /  personality, quiz

    The Open-Source Psychometrics Project, which seems to have been around for a while, provides personality quizzes as an exercise in data collection and personality education:

    This website has been offering a wide selection of psychological assessments, mostly personality tests, since late 2011 and has given millions of results since then. It exists to educate the public about various personality tests, their uses and meaning, the various theories of personality and also to collect data for research and develop new measures. This website is under continuous development and new tests and information are being added all the time.

    One of the more recent quizzes matches your personality with fictional characters, and the results seem oddly close? I took the short version, and out of 2,000 characters, I was a 92% match to Data from Star Trek. I’m not totally sure how I feel about that.

    You can also download anonymized data collected through the project.

  • Reaching 1 million deaths

    May 16, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  coronavirus, mortality, New York Times

    The New York Times narrated the path to one million Covid deaths in the United States. They start with one million dots, each one representing a death. As you read, the dots arrange into trends and significant events over these past years.

    As we have talked about before, it’s impossible to communicate the true weight of a single death, much less a million, but the individual dots provide a visual foundation to better understand abstract trends.

  • Inflation based on your spending

    May 13, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  calculator, inflation, New York Times

    We’ve been hearing a lot about inflation rates lately on a national scale. However, how inflation impacts you depends on what you spend your money on. Ben Casselman and Ella Koeze for The New York Times provide an estimate for you.

  • Data Underload  /  age, people, time use

    How Much Time We Spend Alone and With Others

    Oftentimes what we’re doing isn’t so important as who we’re spending our time with. Based on data from the American Time Use Survey, this is a simulated day for 100 people.

    Read More
  • Chart used as drink label

    May 11, 2022

    Topic

    Data Art  /  food, ingredient, labels

    For Swee Kombucha, Bedow used a stacked chart as a food label to show the ingredient breakdowns for various beverages. The greater the area is, the more ingredient by volume there is in the drink.

    This project takes me back. See also nutritional facts redesigned, alcoholic beverage pie charts, the engineer’s guide to drinks, and coffee drink breakdowns. The two-year span from 2010 to 2011 was quite the renaissance period for beverage percentages.

  • Scale of one million deaths

    May 10, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  Axios, coronavirus, mortality, scale

    The United States is about to reach one million confirmed Covid deaths, or already passed the mark if you consider excess deaths. There’s no way to truly feel that number, but Axios visualized the scale, with comparisons against city populations and historical events.

    A diamond shape represents counts, and as you scroll, shapes fill the screen until you only see the tips. The shapes overflow beyond what we can or want to understand. The time series line on the bottom shows cumulative deaths over time, leading towards the one-million mark.

  • F1 Racing results plotted as lightning

    May 9, 2022

    Topic

    Statistical Visualization  /  Formula 1, Joey Cherdarchuk, race

    Joey Cherdarchuk used a lightning metaphor to visualize the outcomes of races from the 2021 season. The x-axis represents how far ahead or behind the each racer is compared to the average. The y-axis represents laps. Racing and thunder sounds play in the background for dramatic effect. I’m into it.

  • Formula 1 car redesign

    May 9, 2022

    Topic

    Infographics  /  car, Formula 1, New York Times

    The rules around a car’s aerodynamics for Formula 1 racing changed a lot this year, which means new challenges and big shifts in team rankings. Josh Katz and Jeremy White, for The New York Times, illustrated the changes and how modifications affect a car’s performance.

  • Global warming bike path

    May 6, 2022

    Topic

    Data Art  /  climate change, Ed Hawkins, physical

    The @LpzfuersKlima team have completed painting a giant representation of the Warming Stripes on the Sachsenbrücke in Leipzig, thanks to crowd funding.
    Already starting conversations for those using the bridge. #ShowYourStripes pic.twitter.com/OFY9Jeq1zH

    — Ed Hawkins (@ed_hawkins) April 27, 2022

    It amazes me how many places in the world Ed Hawkins’ Warming Stripes appears. My favorite has still gotta be the shower tiles.

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