News graphics - Ivan

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News graphics, technical illustrations, documentation.

Readings:

* Visual Explanations, pages 144 - 145

* Envisioning Information, chapter 3

* The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, chapter 2 and 9

- A ligt transparent color for flow-lines is allowing the underlying type to show through.

- Good design has two key elements:

  1. simplicity of design
  2. complexity of data

- Attractive displays of statistical information:

  1. Have a properly chosen format and design
  2. use words, numbers, and drawing together
  3. reflect a balance, proportion, a sense of relevant scale
  4. display an accessible complexity of detail
  5. often have a narrative quality, a story to tell about the data
  6. are drawn in a professional manner, with the technical details of production done with care
  7. avoid content-free decoration, including chartjunk

- The conventional sentence is a poor way to show more than two numbers because it prevents comparisons within the data.

- Pie chart should newer be used given their low data-density and failure to order numbers along visual dimension.

- Words and pictures belong together. Viewers need the help that words provide.

- There are nearly always better sequence than alphabetical.

- Tables and graphics should be run into text whenever possible, avoiding the clumsy and diverting segregation of "See Fig. 2".

- Colors if used, are chosen so that the color-deficient and color-blind (5 - 10 percent of viewers) can make sense of the graphics (blue - easily distinguishable)

- Lines in data graphics should be thin.

- The greater meaning is given to a greater line weight.

- Our eye is naturally practiced in detecting deviations form the horizon, and graphics design should take advantage of this fact. Horizontally stretched time-series are more accessible to the eye.

- The analogy to the horizon also suggests that a shaded, high contrast display might occasionally be better than the floating snake. The shading should be calm, without moire effect.

- If the nature of data suggests the shape of the graphics, follow that suggestion. Otherwise move toward horizontal graphics about 50 percent wider than tall (Golden Rectangle).

* Beautiful Evidence, pages 116 - 117