desideratum

  • Archive
  • RSS
As Nicholas Felton rightly points out, infographics—like the one above—that stem from statistical misuse are irresponsible and dangerous. It’s frightening how complacent we become when faced with pretty pictures. Stupid halo effect.
/via feltron:

Here’s an insidious new book from Jonathan Barnbrook. It seems that his studio has jumped on the infographics bandwagon and produced a book filled with awful graphics like the one above. 
I find this piece extremely dangerous, as it shows the strength of this language to influence and the power of ill-formed graphics to deceive. The book establishes its authority with the title “The Little Book of Shocking Global FACTS”, so while sources are not provided, these are facts so we shouldn’t worry.
The bigger problem is that basic tenants of information design aren’t followed. No numbers are provided for this map, but a little analysis using the key shows that these circles were drawn using diameter or radius as an input rather than area. And because the data is not included, it can’t be redrawn to illustrate the distortion created by this mistake.
Finally, the whole thing is printed, which gives it additional credibility*, and then makes it impossible for it to be fixed.
Scary stuff.
*Unlike JPEGS, printing costs money, so you tend to fact-check and proofread printed materials before releasing them.
fuckyeahinfo:

Infographics of the Day: The Little Book of Shocking Global Facts | Co.
Pop-upView Separately

As Nicholas Felton rightly points out, infographics—like the one above—that stem from statistical misuse are irresponsible and dangerous. It’s frightening how complacent we become when faced with pretty pictures. Stupid halo effect.

/via feltron:

Here’s an insidious new book from Jonathan Barnbrook. It seems that his studio has jumped on the infographics bandwagon and produced a book filled with awful graphics like the one above. 

I find this piece extremely dangerous, as it shows the strength of this language to influence and the power of ill-formed graphics to deceive. The book establishes its authority with the title “The Little Book of Shocking Global FACTS”, so while sources are not provided, these are facts so we shouldn’t worry.

The bigger problem is that basic tenants of information design aren’t followed. No numbers are provided for this map, but a little analysis using the key shows that these circles were drawn using diameter or radius as an input rather than area. And because the data is not included, it can’t be redrawn to illustrate the distortion created by this mistake.

Finally, the whole thing is printed, which gives it additional credibility*, and then makes it impossible for it to be fixed.

Scary stuff.

*Unlike JPEGS, printing costs money, so you tend to fact-check and proofread printed materials before releasing them.

fuckyeahinfo:

Infographics of the Day: The Little Book of Shocking Global Facts | Co.

Source: fastcodesign.com

    • #infographics
    • #design for bad
  • 1 year ago > fuckyeahinfo
  • 60
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

60 Notes/ Hide

  1. marcuskwan liked this
  2. aperturismo reblogged this from feltron
  3. vicki-brown reblogged this from feltron
  4. cigars- liked this
  5. cmykarley reblogged this from feltron
  6. lupe-baranski1 liked this
  7. alechsml reblogged this from feltron and added:
    This person speaks...truth. It isn’t always about pretty colours
  8. reeo liked this
  9. karmadude liked this
  10. faroekat reblogged this from feltron and added:
    add - Nicholas Felton did...top five countries in...graph...
  11. catharsis reblogged this from feltron and added:
    As Nicholas Felton rightly points out, infographics—like...above—that stem from...
  12. 2arrs2ells reblogged this from feltron and added:
    appoint feltron Chief...Infographics INTERPOL?
  13. stereojam reblogged this from feltron
  14. herrstucki reblogged this from feltron
  15. lifeattractslife liked this
  16. acerbia reblogged this from feltron and added:
    with your media matters proj.
  17. migreyes liked this
  18. dannydb liked this
  19. natetron liked this
  20. caseyagollan liked this
  21. nuanceworkshop liked this
  22. sohcahtoa liked this
  23. sabbatical liked this
  24. mintyr reblogged this from feltron
  25. ddddarby reblogged this from feltron
  26. viafrank liked this
  27. thisisthelifeichose liked this
  28. ticklr reblogged this from feltron
  29. akio reblogged this from feltron
  30. gean liked this
  31. scudmissile liked this
  32. warlike liked this
  33. partspermillion liked this
  34. iomegadrive reblogged this from feltron and added:
    bad infographic shark = jumped.
  35. catharsis liked this
  36. feltron reblogged this from fuckyeahinfo and added:
    Here’s a frightening new book from Jonathan Barnbrook. It seems that his studio has jumped on the infographics bandwagon...
  37. fuckyeahinfo posted this
← Previous • Next →

Portrait/Logo

These are the thoughts and discoveries of Keith Chu, a web design engineer and culture hacker at Autodesk in San Francisco.

Feel free to check out my work and find out a little bit about me on Foodspotting and Google Reader.

Elsewhere

  • @Catharsis on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • keith on Pinboard
  • keithchurch on Last.fm
  • Linkedin Profile
  • Xbox Live Profile

Twitter

loading tweets…

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Mobile

Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr