more evidence that Americans aren’t curious about the world around us

The US versions of Time and Newsweek often have different cover/lead stories from what the international versions have, suggesting that the publishers think that US readers won’t buy as many magazines with those other cover stories.  Or do they already know that?    http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/12/02/american-vs-international-news-time-and-newsweek/.   Insights into the national lack of curiosity about the world around us?

making strategic choices about your tattoos

A very clever sketch that interprets tattoo placements.   I guess Barbie didn’t take their advice?

via Nag on the Lake.

geographic data represented unconventionally

Matthew Ericson, the deputy graphics director at the NY Times, posted recently about making wise mapping choices.  His explanations draw nicely from data visualization guidelines, and I remember showing those New Orleans maps to my students.  “When the interesting patterns aren’t geographic patterns” is what I’ve referred to in the past as “graphs and charts that display geographic data with alternative representations of space.”  I talked about this category earlier this month at Georgetown’s Center for New Designs in Learning & Scholarship.  GapminderWorld’s chart is a classic example.  Their “map” tab is a bit of a bore…

I’m not sure whether she’s still at this job, but I liked this 2007 interview that mapmaker Erin Aigner gave about her work at the NY Times.

another reason to pay attention in your statistics classes

Media Oversimplifies New Study Linking Alcohol and Breast Cancer.  Cabernet may be the smoking gun, but it may not. Is there anything the media doesn’t over-simplify?  Isn’t that what we pay them to do?

Can the human body’s reactions to what it ingests and what it’s exposed to over its lifetime be linked to its responses with any certainty?  You could spend a bunch of time looking up diseases that you or your neighbor might possibly one day contract, or you could rely on statistics to tell you what’s more likely.  Know what I love about this graphic from the National Safety Council?  That “Total, Any Cause” is still 1 in 1.  Hah, I knew it!  Pass the cabernet.

Like my friend Phil always quotes, “If the brain were so simple that we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn’t. ”  Emerson Pugh.

VGI efforts to find localized radiation hot spots in Japan

PBS reported on a Japanese VGI effort to find micro hot spots.  Clever thinking to have the container with the Geiger counter and the GPS look like a bento box!  The community efforts are contributing to this regional map of radiation measurements, coordinated by Safecast.org.

TeachSpatial site revised with new content

The original teachspatial.org site has been updated with new resources and ideas for teaching content that has a spatial focus.  In particular, check out the spatial filter for the National Science Digital Library (NSDL) resource content and the (US, K-12) standards browser.

Only over an open bottle might one want to start debating what’s a spatial “concept” and what’s not…

Nice work, Karl.

finding meaning in borders, edges, frontiers, and boundaries

I happened across this NYT opinion piece today on borders. It’s by Frank Jacobs, the esteemed blogger from Strange Maps.  It’d be nearly impossible to keep track of historical European “national” boundaries without mapped representations.

Staying fixed in one location, but having that one location be considered different places over time, reminded me of the research into how and when children develop their sense of nested or hierarchical space.  That I am in Ithaca and New York and the United States, all at the same time. And that I can be a concurrent Ithacan and New Yorker and United Statesian (sometimes I resist American).  Piaget and Weil studied this for Swiss children.

Piaget, J., & Weil, A.-M. (1951). The development in children of the idea of the homeland and of relations with other countries. International Social Science Bulletin, 3, 571-578.

The NYT piece also reminded me of Edward Casey‘s musings about fixed borders and porous boundaries. I heard him speak once at Redlands and was captivated at a philosopher’s take on the topic.  I would have loved the time to sit down with him in front of a GIS and muse on its points, lines, and polygons.

Here’s a link to his Edges and the In-Between essay (pdf).

Census data, a traditional approach to US social information

If you’re looking to map people across the US, there is no source of information with as much comprehensive coverage at the Census data. Of course it might not be the type of information you want, but you’ll have to take that up with Congress.

Meanwhile, here are a couple of sources for it:

American Fact Finder, info from the source itself.  Be brave and dive in.

Social Explorer, a long-time favorite, especially if you just want to LOOK at Census maps.

the National Historical Geographic Information System. A funny name for what it is: a good source for raw historical data.  Plus the only source I know of for historical boundary files.

seeing urban patterns over New York

Once you have the habit of mind, you notice patterns everywhere.  Spatial thinking by photographers over New York, duly noted as City Geometry (link to NYT slide show).

Mining (and then Mapping) Wikileaks

My colleagues from the University of Virginia have posted another step-by-step on their Spatial Humanities site, this one from Devin Becker, a digital initiatives librarian at the University of Idaho.   You too can follow Devin’s (tried and true) instructions and dive into Wikileaks yourself, with his 2-part example of the Afghan War Diary data.

One particularly great thing about this guide?   A simple entry to  Google Fusion tables, for those of us who haven’t had the time to play at all yet.  Thanks, Devin.

I tried to find a link to a website for Devin at the University of Idaho, and failed. But in the process I did uncover his cool design for Visualizing Metadata.  My library friends at Redlands will like this…