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Data Visualization: Infographics Open Your Eyes

9 September 2008 by Peter

Spotted recently in the NYTimes: “Lines and Bubbles and Bars, Oh My! New Ways to Sift Data“

Nice quote near the end on why infographics and visualization can help you when you are working with data:

Presenting results in a static spreadsheet or table may do the job. “But sometimes it’s like driving with your eyes closed,” he [Ben Schneiderman, dubbed in the article as "a pioneer in information visualization"] said. “With visualization, it might be possible to open your eyes and see something that will help you” — for instance, patterns, clusters, gaps or outliers in the data.

I had this exact experience the other day – I was working with some info on spending over the last several  years. It was a very simple table, but I was getting distracted by the individual numbers, unable to see if there was a pattern. So I popped it into a simple line graph and zap! I understood the trend instantly — it was downward, which in this particular case was very much to my liking.

Add to that the interactive and community aspects of the current data viz boom online, and then you can see how the Interwebs is doing for charts’n'graphs what it’s already done for music, video, news and most forms of textual information.

Aside: the article is mainly a profile of IBM’s Many Eyes dataviz app/community site. Which I keep meaning to check out more, but have yet to really dive in. Others in the same vein that I’ve heard tell of: Swivel, Track’n'graph.

And of course the NYT themselves are purveyors of fine interactive infographics. One of my fave examples of NYT brand infocandy:”The Ebb and Flow of Movies” – I revel in the swirly forms – all it needs is playback controls as well as the slider and it would be perfect.

Here’s a nice screen shot of the Ebb and Flow infographic in action – pretty stuff!

screen capture from NYTimes' interactive infographic on hollywood box office data

oooh, swirly swirly - and nice fall colours too

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Posted in design, images, visualization | Tagged data visualization, infographics, Many Eyes, New York Times, Swivel, Track'n'Graph | 5 Comments

5 Responses

  1. on 11 September 2008 at 7:44 am daphne

    I’m a fan of http://flowingdata.com/ – have you been?


  2. on 11 September 2008 at 9:58 am Peter

    oh yeah Flowing Data is wonderful. I’m also a fan of http://infosthetics.com/ – great eye for when data becomes art – and recently been spending more time with http://junkcharts.typepad.com/ – a practical take on what works and what doesn’t when it comes to charts and graphs.


  3. on 11 September 2008 at 2:02 pm roger

    I like http://www.youcalc.com, which I just started exploring (it’s appears to be in beta still). It offers not just visualization but also real-time data mashing and calculation/modeling. It seems to integrate to swivel, many-eyes, and most data sources out there.


  4. on 11 September 2008 at 4:08 pm Peter

    thanks Roger looks neat.


  5. on 6 June 2010 at 12:18 pm Russian Sphinx

    I have just created my first interactive ManyEyes map “Ease of doing business index in different countries”http://manyeyes.alphaworks.ibm.com/manyeyes/visualizations/easy-of-doing-business I posted the map as image in my blog Russian Sphinxhttp://russiansphinx.blogspot.com/2010/06/warning-business-friendly-economies.html
    ManyEyes is user friendly so you do not need to spend a lot of time to create good chart or map, but I am not sure if it is good solution for me. I need good charts and maps for my blog. Interactive maps looks perfect but I am not able to place them as interactive on my blog, so I just post normal image and add link to ManyEyes. Maybe it will be a bit annoying for my visitors and I will have to focus on static maps.
    I also use Tableau Public.



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