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Data Visualization

Data Visualization. Lies, Damn Lies, and Bad Graphs. Lies, Damn Lies, and Bad Graphs. Lies, Damn Lies, and Bad Graphs. Visual Medium. Reports Paper (static, with time) Web (dynamic and interactive) Presentations (static and dynamic).

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Data Visualization

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  1. Data Visualization

  2. Lies, Damn Lies, and Bad Graphs

  3. Lies, Damn Lies, and Bad Graphs

  4. Lies, Damn Lies, and Bad Graphs

  5. Visual Medium • Reports • Paper (static, with time) • Web (dynamic and interactive) • Presentations (static and dynamic)

  6. “It’s not just about producing graphics for publication,” Aldhous explains. “It’s about playing around and making a bunch of graphics that help you explore your data. This kind of graphical analysis is a really useful way to help you understand what you’re dealing with, because if you can’t see it, you can’t really understand it. But when you start graphing it out, you can really see what you’ve got.”

  7. Four sets of data with the same correlation of 0.816

  8. Percent Blue relative to Red?

  9. Percent Blue relative to Red?

  10. Bad

  11. Better

  12. Even Better*

  13. #Introduction #History of Plots #The Explanatory Power of Graphics #Basic Philosophy of Approach #Graphical Integrity #Data Densities #Data Compression #Multifunctioning Graphical Elements #Maximize data-ink; minimize non-data ink #Small Multiples #Chartjunk #Colors #General Philosophy for Increasing Data Comprehension #Techniques for Increasing Data Comprehension #When NOT to Use Graphics #Aesthetics

  14. Chartjunk and Graphics Integrity

  15. Types of chartjunk • Chartjunk are non-data-ink or redundant data-ink decoration • Unintended Optical Art (Moiré vibration) • The Grid • The Duck: Self-promoting Graphics

  16. Unintended Optical Art • Mainly rely on moiré effects • Distracting appearance of vibration and movement • The most common form of graphical clutter

  17. Moiré Vibrations

  18. The Grid • Dark grid lines are chartjunk • The grid should usually be muted or completely supressed

  19. The Grid (cont’d) • Marey’s train schedule

  20. The Duck • Self-promoting graphics: when the data measures become design elements

  21. Duck Examples

  22. "In our excitement to produce what we could only make before with great effort, many of us have lost sight of the real purpose of quantitative displays — to provide the reader with important, meaningful, and useful insight." — Stephen Few

  23. Graphical Integrity • Graphical excellence begins with telling the truth about the data Some examples of Lie

  24. Two Principles • The representation of numbers, as physically measured on the surface of the graphics, should be directly proportional to the numerical quantities represented • Clear, detailed and thorough labeling should be used to defeat distoration

  25. Violating rule 1 18 miles/gallon: 0.6 inches; 27.5miles/gallon: 5.3 inches

  26. Lie Factor • Rule 1 can be measured by Lie factor size of effect shown in graphics size of effect in data • Lie Factor equal to one is ideal • The previous slide has a lie factor of 14.8 Lie Factor =

  27. Design and Data Variation • Show data variation, not design variation • 1973-1978: one vertical inch • equals to $8.00. In 1979, • One vertical inch equals $3-4 • 1973-1978: one horzontal inch • equals 3.7 years, while 1979 • equals 0.57 year

  28. Example • Lie factor: 9.5 • The price of oil is inflated so need to be repaired.

  29. Government Spending • Tricks to exaggerate the growth of spending

  30. Real Government Spending • Tricks to exaggerate the growth of spending • Tricks to exaggerate the growth of spending

  31. Visual Area and Numerical Measure • Tricking the reviewer with design variation is to use areas to show 1D data Lie factor: 2.8

  32. Content is Essential • Graphics must not quote data out of context

  33. Content is Essential • Graphics must not quote data out of context

  34. On Using Color…

  35. Rule #3: Use color only when needed to serve a particular communication goal.

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