Data Visualization in Society / edited by Martin Engbretsen and Helen Kennedy.

Today we are witnessing an increased use of data visualization in society. Across domains such as work, education and the news, various forms of graphs, charts and maps are used to explain, convince and tell stories. In an era in which more and more data are produced and circulated digitally, and di...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Baltimore, Maryland : : Project Muse,, 2020
©2020
Year of Publication:2020
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (464 pages) :; illustrations (chiefly colour); digital file(s).
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: The relationships between graphs, charts, maps and meanings, feelings, engagements / Helen Kennedy and Martin Engebretsen
  • Section I Framing data visualization
  • Ways of knowing with data visualizations / Jill Walker Rettberg
  • Inventorizing, situating, transforming: Social semiotics and data visualization / Giorgia Aiello
  • The political significance of data visualization: Four key perspectives / Torgeir Uberg Ncerland
  • Section II Living and working with data visualization
  • Rain on your radar: Engaging with weather data visualizations as part of everyday routines / Eef Masson and Karin van Es
  • Between automation and interpretation: Using data visualization in social media analytics companies / Salla-Maaria Laaksonen and Juho Pääkkonen
  • Accessibility of data visualizations: An overview of European statistics institutes / Mikael Snaprud and Andrea Velazquez
  • Evaluating data visualization: Broadening the measurements of success / Arran L. Ridley and Christopher Birchall
  • Approaching data visualizations as interfaces: An empirical demonstration of how data are imag(in)ed / Daniela van Geenen and Maranke Wieringa
  • Visualizing data: A lived experience / Jill Simpson
  • Data visualization and transparency in the news / Helen Kennedy, Wibke Weber, and Martin Engebretsen
  • Section Ill Data visualization, learning, and literacy
  • What is visual-numeric literacy, and how does it work? / Elise Seip Tonnessen - Data visualization literacy: A feminist starting point / Catherine D'Ignazio and Rahul Bhargava
  • Is literacy what we need in an unequal data society? / Lulu Pinney
  • Multimodal academic argument in data visualization / Arlene Archer and Travis Noakes
  • Section IV Data visualization semiotics and aesthetics
  • What we talk about when we talk about beautiful data visualizations / Sara Brinch - A multimodal perspective on data visualization / Tuomo Hiippala
  • Exploring narrativity in data visualization in journalism / Wibke Weber
  • The data epic: Visualization practices for narrating life and death at a distance / Jonathan Gray
  • What a line can say: Investigating the semiotic potential of the connecting line in data visualizations / Verena Elisabeth Lechner
  • Humanizing data through 'data comics': An introduction to graphic medicine and graphic social science / Aria Alamalhodaei, Alexandra Alberda, and Anna Feigenbaum
  • Section V Data visualization and inequalities
  • Visualizing diversity: Data deficiencies and semiotic strategies / John P. Wihbey, Sarah Jackson, Pedro M Cruz, and Brooke Foucault Welles
  • What is at stake in data visualization? A feminist critique of the rhetorical power of data visualizations in the media / Rosemary Lucy Hill
  • The power of visualization choices: Different images of patterns in space / Britta Ricker, Menno-Jan Kraak, and Yuri Engelhardt
  • Making visible politically masked risks: Inspecting unconventional data visualization of the Southeast Asian haze / Anna Berti Suman
  • How interactive maps mobilize people in geoactivism / Miren Gutierrez.