Women as academic authors over the years
The Chronicle of Higher Education has a look at the percentage of academic papers published by women, over the past five centuries. The articles and authors described in this data were drawn from the...
View ArticleFive years of traffic fatalities
I made a graphic a while back that showed traffic fatalities over a year. John Nelson extended on that, pulling five years of data and subsetting by some factors: alcohol, weather, and if a pedestrian...
View ArticleRandom walk on pi
By Francisco Javier Aragón Artacho, "This is a walk made out of the first 100 billion digits of pi in base 4 with the following rules for the steps: 0 right, 1 up, 2 left, 3 down." [via]
View ArticleSeries of concentric circles emanating from glowing red dot
Run for your lives. The red concentric circles on the green squiggly are headed your way. From The Onion: [via @civilstat]
View ArticleFlowchart: Gandalf problem solving
The Lotr Project breaks down the thought process in the magical mind.
View ArticleCharacter mentions in Les Miserables
Jeff Clark took a detailed look at Victor Hugo's Les Miserables via character mentions, word connections, and word usage. The above is character mentions with color showing sentiment. Red means...
View ArticleUsing data to find a husband
When it was time to settle down with the right man, Amy Webb joined two dating sites, created a profile, and went on some horrible dates. Her solution was to create fake male profiles and then scrape...
View ArticleGlobal temperature rises over past century
New Scientist mapped global temperature change based on a NASA GISTEMP analysis. The graphs and maps all show changes relative to average temperatures for the three decades from 1951 to 1980, the...
View ArticleHow to Animate Transitions Between Multiple Charts
Sometimes one chart just isn’t good enough. Sometimes you need more. Perhaps the story you are telling with your visualization needs to be told from different perspectives and different charts cull out...
View Articlesilenc: Removing the silent letters from a body of text
During a two-week visualization course, Momo Miyazaki, Manas Karambelkar, and Kenneth Aleksander Robertsen imagined what a body of text would be without the the silent letters in silenc. silenc is...
View ArticleSlitscanning online videos
Thanks to Sha Hwang, you can now siltscan videos on YouTube and Vimeo with an easy-to-use bookmarklet. Just go to the video and click. In case you're unfamiliar with the technique, here's a description...
View ArticleData Points: First look
For the past year, I've been working on Data Points: Visualization that Means Something, and you can pre-order it now. Visualization has grown a lot in the 5-something years I've written for...
View ArticleBillionaires of the world ranked and charted
How wealthy are the richest people in the world? How do they compare to each other, and how does their net worth change over time? Bloomberg just put up an interactive tool to answer such questions,...
View ArticleEvolution of science fiction covers in color
Arthur Buxton plotted the most common colors of Penguin Publishing science fiction colors and arranged them over time. Also available in print. I wonder if there's a good way to show connections...
View ArticleInternet Explorer causation
I'm almost certain this relationship is significant. Side note: Is there a meaningless-correlations tumblr yet? [via]
View ArticleTen years of cumulative precipitation
We've all seen rain maps for a sliver of time. Screw that. I want to see the total amount of rainfall over a ten-year period. Bill Wheaton did just that in the video above, showing cumulative rainfall...
View ArticleNFL fans on Facebook, based on likes
As the Super Bowl draws near, Facebook took a look at football fandom across the country. The National Football League is one of the most popular sports in America with some incredibly devoted fans. At...
View ArticleBaseball Hall of Fame voting trajectories
Carlos Scheidegger and Kenny Shirley, along with Chris Volinsky, visualized Major League Baseball Hall of Fame voting, from the first class in 1936 (which included Babe Ruth) up to present. All a fan...
View ArticleMercator map puzzle
The Mercator projection can be useful for giving directions, but when it comes to world maps, the projection doesn't hold up well as you move far north and south. By how much? Give this puzzle game a...
View ArticleOwn and securely store your location with OpenPaths
There are a lot of ways to collect your location, whether it's for journaling and personal reflection or for sharing with others, but it can be tricky making use of your data once it's stored behind...
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