Tuesday, June 28, 2016

17 inspirational examples of data visualization

We can all collect masses of data, but it only becomes genuinely useful when we use it to make a clear point.


This is where data visualization comes in. Showing data in context and using creativity to make that same data tell a story can truly bring the numbers to life.


There are a whole bunch of data visualization tools out there to help create your own, but here are some existing examples for inspiration.


A day in the life of Americans


This excellent visualization from Flowing data uses information from the American Time Use Survey to show what Americans are up to at any time of day.


day


What streaming services pay artists


This from the wonderful information is beautiful website, looks at how the major online streaming music services compare in terms of paying the musicians.


streaming pay


Two centuries of US immigration


This fantastic visualization from metrocosm shows the various waves of immigration into the United States from the 19th century to the present day.


us immigration


US population trends over time


This gif from the Pew Research Center is a great example of how movement can be used to convey shifts and trends over time.


pew gif


Why you should take the bus


The German town of Münster produced this series of images back in 1991 to encourage bus use. It's beautifully simple showing the relative impact of the same number of people (72) on bicycles, in cars, or on a bus.


munster


What happens in an internet minute?


This infographic from excelacom presents what happens online in 60 seconds, including:



  • 150 million emails are sent.

  • 1,389 Uber rides.

  • 527,760 photos shared on Snapchat.

  • 51,000 app downloads on Apple's App Store.

  • $203,596 in sales on Amazon.com.


Excelacom_InternetMinute2016


US wind map


This moving visualization shows wind speed and direction in real time.


It looks great and is easy to understand, which is key to effect data visualization. This one comes from hint.fm.


wind map


Daily routines of creative people


I've always been pretty cynical about this 'X things successful people do before breakfast' stuff – as if by following this, people are suddenly going to become Steve Jobs or Albert Einstein.


However, this one from podio showing daily routines of creative people is very interesting. It won't turn you into a great composer, but it's a fascinating insight nonetheless.


routines


The impact of vaccines


This is a series of visualizations from the Wall Street Journal, which shows the impact of vaccines on various infectious diseases.


It's striking stuff, which clearly demonstrates the incredible positive impact of vaccination programs in the US.


vaccine impact


London food hygeine


This is a great use of freely available data to provide useful information for the public.


london hygeine


The one million tweet map


This uses tweet data to present a geographical representation of where people tweet about topics. The example below is for 'Brexit'.


1m tweet map


The fallen of WW2


This, from Neil Halloran is a cross between data visualization and documentary.


ww2


There are two versions of this. The video version you can see embedded below, and an interactive version.


People living on earth


A simple but very effective visualization of the world's population, and the speed at which it increases.


earth


The ultimate data dog


This, again from Information is Beautiful, uses data on the intelligence and other characteristics of dog breeds, plotting this against data on the popularity of various breeds from the American Kennel Club.


data dog


How much did band members contribute to each Beatles album? 


This from Mike Moore, shows the relative writing percentage for each Beatles album, as well as the contribution over time.


The Beatles


A day on the London Underground


From Will Gallia, who used data from a single day's use of the London underground to produce this timelapse visualization.



Fish Pharm


This is from way back in 2010, and illustrates the fact that antidepressants and other pharmaceuticals are now showing up in fish tissue.


fishpills

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