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"Tell the chef, the beer is on me."
In the first post in Radar's new "visualization deconstructed" series, I talked about how data visualization originated from cartography (which some now just call "mapping"). Cartography initially focused on mapping physical spaces, but at the end of the 20th century we created and discovered new spaces that were made possible by the Internet. By abstracting away the constraints of the physical space, social networks such as Facebook emerged and opened up new territories, where topology is primarily defined by the social fabric rather than physical space. But is this fabric completely de-correlated from the physical space?
Last December, Paul Butler, an intern on Facebook's data infrastructure engineering team, posted a visualization that examined a subset of the relations between Facebook users. Users were positioned in their respective cities and arcs denoted friendships.
Paul extracted the data and started playing with it. As he put it:
Visualizing data is like photography. Instead of starting with a blank canvas, you manipulate the lens used to present the data from a certain angle.
There is definitely discovery involved in the process of creating a visualization, where by giving visual attributes to otherwise invisible data, you create a form for data to embody.
The most striking discovery that Paul made while creating his visualization was the unraveling of a very detailed map of the world, including the shapes of the continents (remember that only lines representing relationships are drawn).
If you compare the Facebook visualization with NASA's world at night pictures, you can see how close the two maps are, except for Russia and parts of China. It seems that Facebook has a big growth opportunity in these regions!
So let's have a look at Paul's visualization:
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Overall, this is a great visualization that had a lot of success last December, being mentioned in numerous blogs and liked by more than 2,000 people on Facebook. However, I can see a couple ways to improve it and open up new possibilities:
In last week's post, I looked at an interactive visualization, where users can explore the data and its different representations. With the Facebook data, we have a static visualization where we can only look, not touch — it's like gazing at the stars.
Although a static visualization has the potential to evolve into an interactive visualization, I think creating a static image involves a little bit more care. Interactive visualizations can be used as exploration tools, but static visualizations need to present insight the data explorer had when creating the visualization. It has to tell a story to be interesting.
Related:
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