Part I, Chapter 4 Data Tables and Drawing Schemes.

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Part I, Chapter 4 Data Tables and Drawing Schemes

Transcript of Part I, Chapter 4 Data Tables and Drawing Schemes.

Page 1: Part I, Chapter 4 Data Tables and Drawing Schemes.

Part I, Chapter 4

Data Tables and Drawing Schemes

Page 2: Part I, Chapter 4 Data Tables and Drawing Schemes.

Organizing DataStandard Sequence of the Science Process

1. Hypothesis 2. Experimental Design3. Measurements4. Analysis5. Hypothesis validated?

Tables are the starting point for all scientific analyses.Build your tables at the stage of “experimental design”!Tables are essential to qualitative and quantitative analysis.

http://www.norcalblogs.com/watts/images/data_grill.gif

Data, Data,

Data, Data….

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Organizing Principle of TablesThe legitimate data of a scientific paper are the unadjusted, spontaneous results obtained by following a defined procedure.

-- Entry # / Absorption {2-dimensional table}-- Reaction # / Yield / Purity {3-dimensional table}-- Wavelength / Absorption {2-dimensional table}

A legitimate experimental variable must have been obtained by following a defined procedure and others must be able to reproduce the data.

The ordering parameter employed for listing the experimental variable can be am experimental variable or it can be merely a “count parameter” (i.e., Entry #, Reaction #, ….). The natural order of the numbers is the obvious choice (Wavelength, Reaction Time, Wavenumber, Percent Reaction, …).

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General Comments on TablesTables have a “Table Header” (a.k.a. “Legend” or “Title”). The Legend starts with “Table X:” and it is completed by a sentence in “Title Format”

Tables must be referred to in the main text. Usually a brief summary of the Table is provided when the table is referred to in the text.

Tables must be self-contained. Tables should be understood without reference to the text. -- provide “units” of variables and of data-- use table footnotes to explain units etc. -- refer to “Guidelines to Authors” about formatting requirements

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General Comments on TablesTables have a “Table Header” (a.k.a. “Legend” or “Title”). The Legend starts with “Table X:” and it is completed by a sentence in “Title Format”

Tables must be referred to in the main text. Usually a brief summary of the Table is provided when the table is referred to in the text.

Tables must be self-contained. Tables should be understood without reference to the text. -- provide “units” of variables and of data-- use table footnotes to explain units etc. -- refer to “Guidelines to Authors” about formatting requirements

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JOC Setting the Standards

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1-Dimensional Tables

“1-dimensional tables” can be ordered lists of experimental variables in experimental sections of papers.

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Multi-Dimensional Tables 1

Note the formatting of header and footnotes.

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Multi-Dimensional Tables 2

One can use graphics in the Table header!

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Multi-Dimensional Tables 3

One can use graphics in the Table header!

And one can use graphics in Table cells!

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ArtGeneral Remarks

Schemes

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General Guidelines on ArtArt items have a “Caption” (a.k.a. “Legend” or “Title”) that starts with “Figure X:”, for example, and is completed by a sentence in text format. -- There are differences from journal to journal.-- ALWAYS adhere to the format of the journal you which you submit!-- Art Categories: Figures, Schemes and Charts

Art items must be referred to in the main text. Usually a brief summary of the Figure is provided when the table is referred to in the text.

Art items must be self-contained and should be understood without reference to the text. -- provide “units” of variables and of data

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Organizing Principle of ArtSelect Aspect Ratio-- Portrait or Landscape?-- Use a non-standard aspect ratio? A square? An oval?

Size of Art-- Must fit the journal “layout”.-- Single column width? Double-column width? Full page?

Information Flow-- Top-left to bottom-right; (non)-alternating directions per row?-- Center-heavy and radial flow.

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Art: How Much & What Kind?INTRODUCTION

-- One SCHEME for CONTEXT, almost always

-- One SCHEME for SCOPE (here or in R&D)

METHODS

-- Fancy experimental setup?

-- Schemes with FLOW DIAGRAMS.

RESULTS & DISCUSSION

-- Charts of REACTION COMBINATIONS.

-- Figures of DATA.

-- Schemes of MECHANISMS & INTERPRETATIONS.

CONCLUSION

-- One SCHEME that EXPANDS on a PRINCIPLE, sometimes

What is thisall about?

A new paradigm?

Table or Figure.Not Both!

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Use Available

Resources!

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COLOR: Important, Needed?

Decide on a COLOR SCHEME.

Additive Color Scheme RGB (and Black also)

Subtractive Color Scheme CMYK

K for “key” = black

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COLOR: CodesRange of R, G, and B Intensities: 256 = 162 values

Decimal Numbers (0, 1,… 9): 0 (none) – 255 (full) 2x102 + 5x101 + 5x100 Hexadecimal Numbers (0, 1,… 9, A,… F): 0 (none) – FF (full) = Fx161 + Fx160

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COLOR WHEEL

PRIMARY SECONDARY TERTIARY

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SHADESAdd black

TONESAdd gray

TINTSAdd white

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Aesthetics

DATA make the Art!

-- Most of the content should be data

-- Everything else is there as support

Color

-- To enhance data

-- Do not distract

Add-on Features

-- Arrows & explanatory devices only if needed

Format

-- Clean and junk-free

It’s allAbout Data

Clean

What I like in a good author is not what he says, but what he whispers.Logan Pearsall Smith, "All Trivia," Afterthoughts, 1931

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Schemes: Flow Direction

Linear, left-to-right:

Flow to center:

Flow from center:

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Graphical Abstract

Bad ExamplesVery

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Graphical Abstract Fights #1

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Graphical Abstract Fights #2

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How to Create Schemes

Example: Aspirin Assign. #2: Handout & online.