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Is Information Visualization the Next Frontier for Design?

BY Michael CannellTue May 5, 2009 at 11:49 AM
As design work shifts to infrastructure and problem solving, sexy infographics are part of the new skill set.

You've seen them. Those tag clouds in the right-hand column of Web sites with jumbled type of varying weight and size indicating the relative usage of words. Tag clouds may be the most common example of an emerging field known as "information visualization," an offshoot of graphic design devoted to the clear display of complex information. Executive pay in relation to shareholder returns. Senate voting patterns. The geographic location of cell phones. Similarities among rock albums. Graphic designers are mapping over the known world and posting their graphic interpretations on sites like Visual Complexity.

Visualization got a big boost during the political season from newspapers and networks. On March 24, CNN aired what it claimed was the largest ever tag cloud composed from President Obama's press conference that day.

visualization

If we're going to live in a world driven by data, the thinking goes, we need a simple means of digesting it all. We are increasingly a visual society, and our understanding of the world is increasingly made possible by this new visual language.

nyt flu map

Visualization has been used prominently, and to dazzling effect, at The New York Time s , where a collaboration of art directors and programmers turns masses of data into intuitive displays, like the interactive map of the swine virus shown above.

webtrend map

Another example: the Tokyo firm Information Architects created this Web Trend Map which presents the most popular Internet sites in the intelligible graphic language of a subway system.

traffic

Designers have historically excelled at finding insightful ways of looking at complex problems. Visualization will likely play a prominent role as design evolves beyond the consumer economy (selling $2,000 poufs and other high-end furnishings) and helps create efficient new forms of buildings, food distribution and transportation.

For example, it's likely that New York and other major U.S. cities will experiment with systems that monitor traffic patterns in real time and manage the use of lanes and access accordingly. A project like that would hinge on our ability to map patterns as they happen, along with the alternatives and consequences. It's a big undertaking, but the benefits are considerable: In Stockholm a system that tracks the movement of every car has reduced carbon emissions by 25%.

electric-meter1

Visualization may play a big role in wising up consumers. In the future, we're told, sensors will pick up tiny bits of info on every aspect of our lives and they will be played back to us as graphics. The smart grid, for example, will read the energy use in your home and send back understandable displays suggesting how you might save money by, say, waiting an hour to turn on your air conditioner or reducing your thermostat by two degrees. It will be up to architects to imbed this feature in the home in a way that allows us to interact more efficiently with our surroundings.

power point

You might think of visualization as the antithesis of Power Point, which sometimes seems to make us dumber. Six years ago, Edward Tufte, a Big Thinker in the field of information graphics, issued a 28-page pamphlet that dumped on Power Point as "a faux analysis" that "turns everything into a sales pitch.'' Visualization does the opposite: it reflects the complexity of the world in simple terms. It is a window onto the world, in all its digital complexity. Though of course data can be skewed in deceitful and insidious ways.

Picture 4

Visualization isn't just for RISD graduates. You can create your own word clouds at a new site called Wordle. Paste in a piece of text or enter a URL and Wordle creates a cloud of the most frequently occurring words.

Topics:

Design, Michael Cannell, Information Graphics, visualization, Information Architects, Edward Tufte, Barack Obama, Cable News Network LP LLLP, Tokyo, Edward Tufte, Stockholm


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Recent Comments | 29 Total

May 5, 2009 at 10:15pm by Wayne Kraemer

Thanks for bringing attention to an emerging field. I've put a link to this up at blog.wkraemer.com, along with a little of my thoughts on the future of the Information Visualization.

May 6, 2009 at 3:51am by Gary Boodhoo

Its not exactly an emerging field, just more relevant in day to day life I think. Seminal work was already being done in the 1970's (visualizing abstract datasets) and visualization is part of a longstanding tradition of cartography. However, it seems clear the end users have changed, as this field has greater relevance today than ever before.

Designers have a great opportunity here, but will need to rethink how they communicate - not just to end users, but to programmers.

May 6, 2009 at 5:34am by Meena Kadri

I think its more about de-mystification in general -- as discussed in more detail here:
http://www.randomspecific.com/de-mystify

May 7, 2009 at 5:35am by Fytros George

check out relevant projects:

Artist and computer scientist Jonathan Harris makes online art that captures the world's expression -- and gives us a glimpse of the soul of the Internet --

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/jonathan_harris_tells_the_web_s_secre... --
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/jonathan_harris_collects_stories.html

----
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/david_bolinsky_animates_a_cell.html - Medical animator David Bolinsky presents 3 minutes of stunning animation that show the bustling life inside a cell.

---- http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/hans_rosling_shows_the_best_stats_you...

--- http://livelabs.com/photosynth/

May 11, 2009 at 5:54am by Wayne Smallman

"We are increasingly a visual society,..."

We've always been a visual society. Indeed, we're a visual species.

May 11, 2009 at 10:33am by Pat Allen

This is a great article on a trend we see as increasingly important for effective communications.

You and your readers might also be interested in a few related resources:
*Using Data Visualization as a Reporting Tool Can Reveal Story's Shape is a PoynterOnline article about how reporters create visualizations as a basis for drawing insights from data—these visualizations may or not be intended for publication http://bit.ly/bCBZ
*Data Visualization Is Reinventing Online Storytelling from Advertising Age. The comments, in particular, include lots of development resources. http://bit.ly/5H8n0
*In my niche (consulting on digital strategy for financial services), we’ve been calling for marketers to turn to visualizations as a means of more effectively communicating during the financial crisis. My post on financial market visualizations is at http://bit.ly/PqOSE. We also discuss visualizations in our eBook on social media for investment product marketers http://bit.ly/NwhIx

May 11, 2009 at 4:30pm by Jason Liszkiewicz

I regularly collect data viz resources/links and post them to a monthly link table http://tr.im/irCi for the Earth Intelligence Network non-profit group.


Mobile txt messaging + online mapping is developing further as well. A 6-page links table on mobile + mapping with a focus on crisis-response can be found here http://tr.im/kgof

Other links for info-viz, and "knowledge-mapping":

http://link-bomb.re-configure.org (from http://re-configure.org)

Mobile Democracy proposal http://tr.im/i6V5

Forming Communities of Communications & Foreknowledge

http://smart-city.re-configure.org

Information Operations and Open source Intelligence Conference
http://tr.im/irBF

Media Ecology Association http://tr.im/irBA

Published writing http://smart-city.re-configure.org

EIN Twitter feed http://tr.im/irCA

May 11, 2009 at 4:36pm by Jason Liszkiewicz

And I agree with Meena Kadri's comment on the idea of developing & using such tools for de-mystifying. Or, a term I use more often, de-fragmenting.

May 13, 2009 at 3:24pm by Doug Steiger

Michael - Any recommendations for experts who might be able to explain information visualization to co-workers in a briefing? Edward Tufte seems obvious but are there any others you'd suggest?

May 18, 2009 at 3:00pm by Michael Deutch

While tag clouds and such may be one way to visualize information, mind mapping has been a vehicle that has put the power of information visualization into the hands of the average user for 15 years! Software like Mindjet MindManager lets you visualize, organize and work with your information to paint a picture of your strategy, project and/or communications!

May 18, 2009 at 5:09pm by Bob Jacobson

The Info-D News is the visualization field's website of record.

It's edited by Peter J. Bogaards in The Netherlands:

http://www.informationdesign.org/

Peter does a great job of announcing events, spotlighting individuals, and critiquing visualization projects at many levels.

Another longstanding intellectual beacon is designer John Thackara's Doors of Perception. Thackara travels the world to advise and participate in public- and community-service visualization projects. Interestingly, he's also based in The Netherlands:

http://www.doorsofperception.com/

May 18, 2009 at 7:31pm by Luis Antezana

As a former database manager who has seen gigs of rich data not used for much and hardly made sense of, I've longed for the tools to create such visualizations to be within reach of designers who possess the vision to transform this information into something practical and accessible, the smarts to make it happen, and the systems to deliver it.

I'm glad the article pushes beyond at-hand and historical analysis to hypothetical/situational possibilities, too. It's also interesting to see convergence in this space with traditional business intelligence tools.

I imagine a future implementation as a kind of responsive, artificial intelligence-powered, crystal ball-style interface, with a kind of advanced tamagotchi-esque functionality for business indicators. It's a little goofy-sounding in this anecdotal forum, I realize, but it's cool as I see it :)

June 23, 2009 at 5:03am by alan kissane

Nothing new about the subject of data visualization + information visualization, but it certainly is a science and art. We studied it for a while at school and I'm constantly amazed by the way some people have the ability to create these mechanisms for manipulating information in a visual way.

( brochure design | label design | custom logos )

June 23, 2009 at 5:04am by alan kissane

Two of the examples featured in the article ought to be taught as examples of what NOT to do in visualizing information. The swine flu map would have you believe that virtually all of Mexico is infected, while the internet 'subway' map adds nothing to one's understanding of the relationship between 'stops' except that the author thought they were related in some vague sequential fashion. Both use a visual gimmick that not only does not enlighten but actively misleads the viewer.
corporate logos

June 23, 2009 at 7:20am by florian smith

very nice article thank you !
computer logo design

July 15, 2009 at 8:29am by William Klien

If we're going to live in a world driven by data, the thinking goes, we need a simple means of digesting it all. We are increasingly a visual society, and our understanding of the world is increasingly made possible by this new visual language for register domain. I think the use of the word increasingly here downplays the significance of information design. It suggests that information design is becoming more important, but does not stress how important it already is. May be become a good web design or with online marketing guide.

July 21, 2009 at 6:20pm by muffin9129 ---

Wow, this is a really cool idea, and I like that site you gave us. I think visualization is the key to marketing success, so I can see why we are using it this way.
muffin9129
http://productreviewsby.me/

August 11, 2009 at 7:02pm by Pat.R R

These are so neat, and I see them everywhere now. Who ever came up with the idea is smart because it is being used fo advertising now too.
Pat.R
http://www.24-7bookie.com

August 20, 2009 at 8:50am by Ashley Madison

Mike shamwow

Information visualization is so appealing to the eye and in my opinion, very important tool in getting the message across. Even though its been around for a while, all we have to do is just improve our creativity.

shamwow

August 31, 2009 at 1:43am by jay smith

Visualization is huge for success in any business.

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September 2, 2009 at 6:39pm by jay smith

Yes visulaization is the key to everything. Your mind is your present, past and future

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September 18, 2009 at 8:46pm by Milad Moussavi

Attention to an emerging field? You were not aware that us humans create our future using visualization. It has been proven for centuries.

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September 27, 2009 at 9:28am by Aren Dummip

You’ve seen them. Those tag clouds in the right-hand column of Web sites with jumbled type of varying weight and size indicating the relative usage of words. Tag clouds may be the most common example of an emerging field known as “information visualization,” an offshoot of graphic design devoted to the clear display of complex information.

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September 30, 2009 at 8:49am by marti shedi

Information design is becoming more important, but does not stress how important it already is. We studied it for a while at school and I'm constantly amazed by the way some people have the ability to create these mechanisms for manipulating information in a visual way.
SEO | website design | website development

September 30, 2009 at 7:46pm by Milad Moussavi

I think it is more of a day to day life as well. I mean the secret really went in depth about visualization and the power behind it you know. but whatever
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October 13, 2009 at 8:52am by azadachan yodjaidee191

Visualization is power life

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November 8, 2009 at 12:41am by Edgar Degas

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