Visual explanations

January 25, 2010 at 6:35 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: ,

This poster uses visualization to educate people about water, by comparing the cost and quality of tap water to bottled water. It’s eye catching and effective because it employs visual images both as icons and as means for comparing and explaining.

The Facts About Bottled Water

Mapping the difference between science and faith

January 16, 2010 at 11:52 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: ,

This is an interesting application of the flowchart to try to explain deep philosophical issues.

It’s thought provoking, indeed it has received a number of divergent comments on other blogs. It is quite arguably an oversemplification of reality, however it serves the purpose of conveying instantly the difference between the two domains.

A version 2.0 was developed to improve the science diagram. This interesting re-appropriation process shows the potential of web 2.0 for visualization, that can be shared online, receive feedback and improved collectively.

Knowledege visualization of muslim scientific heritage

January 4, 2010 at 1:45 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: , ,

I found this interesting cartographic knowledge visualization in Jamae mosque in Singapore. In this mosque, located in Chinatown, they make a great use of visualizations for illustrating concepts and information about the Islamic world and religion principles. It is certainly an interesting place to visit to learn more about Islamic religion: they offer pamphlets on several topics and the main praying hall is surrounded by well-crafted illustrations of how Muslim pray, historical background,  information on culture, etc.

In the image below, a world map is used as a base to highlight the cultural and scientific contributions of Muslims around the world. It is a good example of how to blend pictures and text: images are used both as a mapping background and as explanatory icons.

Source: Jamae Mosque, Singapore

Data Visualization tools

December 17, 2009 at 10:34 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: ,

A recent post on O’Reily media RIA’s blog portraits  a useful collection of 28 data visualization software. It seems that different industries are employing diverse tools for the same goal of visualizing rich data, from very fancy like anychart and axiis, to powerful applications supporting millions of data-points like chronoscope.

Source: axiis - Inside RIA O'Reilly

Cross-cultural differences in symbols

December 13, 2009 at 12:00 pm | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment

Toilet symbol in AsiaAt the moment I am in Singapore conducting cross-cultural research on visualization, and -beside experimenting – I’ve also been hunting for differences in the use of visualization around the city.

Despite Singapore is quite western, and English is the major language, I noticed a consistent use of visualization on packaging instructions and posters explaining rules of behaviors. This might be due to the fact that there are 4 national languages, and not everybody understand English (new immigrants or older folks), so vignettes are an effective way to communicate across language differences.

Here’s a picture I took in Chinatown, the toilet sign! ;)

Information visualization on BBC

December 6, 2009 at 2:59 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: ,
mcCandless

source: mcCandless via BBC

The BBC magazine recently featured an article about how information visualization is becoming a serious business to overcome information overload and help readers understand information more easily. The article shows beautiful infovis examples by David McCandless, author of the book “Information is Beautiful” which will be published in February by Collins in UK.

Hans Rosling amazing graphic animations

November 29, 2009 at 8:04 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment

TED talks are often good examples of the use of graphics and visualization to convey concepts and engage the public.

I believe Hans Roseling always gives remarkable and fascinating talks thanks to the passion he puts in the story telling and -of course- to the great graphics! He shows complex historical data with  gapminder, a non-profit web service displaying time series of development statistics, that makes all the data look very clear and even fun!

He provides several eyes opening talks, and another of my favorites is on Asia’s rise, where he projects the precise date India and China will reach the wealth level of U.K. and U.S.

ITC and student-centric education with knowledge visualization

November 21, 2009 at 1:24 pm | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: ,

Source: IHMC CmapTools

Yesterday Yingqin Zhong, a PhD candidate at the National University of Singapore, gave a very fascinating talk (IS seminars, School of Computing) on the use of ICT for student-centric education.
She provided both a theoretical framework and real life examples of how technology can support better learning. Among the several tools and techniques, including wikis and facebook, she illustrated how knowledge visualization – as mind maps and concept maps- are useful for learning by reflecting and articulating our thoughts. And they also serve as learning resources for others.
I am glad to see that representations are gaining their place as powerful learning and knowledge sharing tools also in Asia!

Yingqin choice of mind map and concept map (as the one in the figure) made me think that indeed these two knowledge representations techniques should be particularly suitable in East Asia, because they emphasize relationships among the elements and are provided in a non-linear structure.
She also presented Second Life as a suitable tool for learning by doing and by collaborating. The issue here is how to exploit the benefit or virtual worlds for education, and not just replicating real life or a chat. This seems a very promising area of research.

Finally she shared a hearth touching story of how an indian girl saved her family’s farm and all the village by identifying through the internet the insect specie responsible for the problems at the farm and the right insecticide!

Very promising topic both for research and for changing the world :)

Cross-cultural differences in the reception of conceptual visualization

November 13, 2009 at 8:54 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags: , ,

These days I am conducting an experiment in Singapore to test if there are cross-cultural differences in the reception of various kinds of business visualizations, between Europe and Asia.

Despite the general belief that visualization is an international language, recent research (see The Geography of Thought by Nisbett) has demonstrated that there are relevant differences in the reception of images, between East Asia and Western countries.

It has not been easy to set up this experiment in a foreign institution with a considerably different working culture… it took several months and lots of adaptation but finally I got some data ! :)

Infosthetics summary of VisWeek 2009

October 29, 2009 at 3:53 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Tags:

In the famous infosthetic website you can find a summary of the major and most interesting happenings and talks at the VisWeek conference. It’s very well done and provides several useful links: http://infosthetics.com/archives/2009/10/visweek_2009_recap.html#extended

I was very glad to see that my talk has been mentioned there (toward the end); despite being probably unusual for the American infovis community (typically very technical), it seems that the results are thought provoking…

…stay tuned for more investigation on the topic!

Next Page »

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.