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posted by Jay on January 9th, 2007
in on images, information architecture, resources, strategy, visualization
A very cool and handy resource: The Periodical Table of Visualization Methods (found via BoingBoing). Once the table loads, when you place your mouse over an element, you see an example visualization (diagram, cartoon, chart, etc.). This is part of the site, Visual Literacy: An E-Learning Tutorial on Visualization for Communication, Engineering and Business.
I like how the periodic table (itself a visualization!) represents the purpose and scope of each visualization in terms of four dimensions:
So, for example, if you wanted to create a simple overview of a process, you could use the periodic table to find types of visualizations that might be good for this, say a cycle diagram, of which you can then see an example. Pretty neat!
Coincidentally, I was just working on a diagram for a future blog post. Let’s see—I guess it’s a kind-of histogram. According to the periodic table, this seems like it’d be a diagram to represent a simple, structural, overview of data. Yep, sounds good!
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