Post on 27-Jan-2015
description
“Our networks are awash in data. A little
of it is information. A smidgen of this shows up as knowledge.
Combined with ideas, some of that is actually useful. Mix in experience,
context, compassion, discipline, humor, tolerance, and humility, and perhaps knowledge
becomes wisdom.”Clifford Stoll
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
When Al Gore rode a scissor crane up to the top of the CO2 emissions graph in the film An Inconvenient Truth, he became a superstar of visual communications. He compellingly used graphs to tell the story of global warming, which helped public opinion in America to finally reach the tipping point.
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
data vizualisation
The goal of visualization is to aid our understanding
of data by leveraging the human visual system’s
highly-tuned ability to see patterns, spot trends, and
identify outliers.
Well-designed visual representations can replace
cognitive calculations with simple perceptual
inferences and improve comprehension, memory,
and decision making.
By making data more accessible and appealing,
visual representations may also help engage more
diverse audiences in exploration and analysis.
The challenge is to create effective and engaging
visualizations that are appropriate to the data.
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
Modern data graphics can do much
more than simply substitute for small
statistical tables. At their best, graphics
are instruments for reasoning about
quantitative information. Often the most
effective way to describe, explore, and
summarize a set of numbers -- even a very
large set -- is to look at pictures of those
numbers. Furthermore, of all methods for
analyzing and communicating statistical
information, well-designed data graphics
are usually the simplest and at the same
time the most powerful.
The Visual Display of Quantitative
Information, Edward R. Tufte, Graphics
Press: Cheshire, CT 1983, Introduction
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
Edward Tufte: The Visual Display of Quantitative Information
Graphical Displays Should :
show the data.•
tell the truth.•
help the viewer think about •
the information rather than
the design.
encourage the eye to •
compare the data.
make large data sets •
coherent.
http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
Why should we be interested in visualization? Because the human visual system is a pattern seeker of enormous power and subtlety. The eye and the visual cortex of the brain form a massively parallel processor that provides the highest-bandwidth channel into human cognitive centers. At higher levels of processing, perception and cognition are closely interelated, which is the reason why the words ‘understanding’ and ‘seeing’ are synonymous.
However, the visual system has its own rules. We can easily see patterns presented in certain ways, but if they are presented in other ways, they become invisible... If we can understand how perception works, our knowledge can be translated into rules for displaying information. Following perception-based rules, we can present our data in such a way that the important and informative patterns stand out. If we disobey the rules, our data will be incomprehensible or misleading.
Information Visualization, Second Edition, Colin Ware, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2004, page xxi
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
Good data visualisations bring pattern, trends and exceptions to light.
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au
Graph Design IQ Test http://www.perceptualedge.com/files/GraphDesignIQ.html
shiralee.saul@westnet.com.au