Title: Presenting Visual Data la Edward Tufte
1Presenting Visual Data à la Edward Tufte
- Marvin Miller, M.D.
- August 6, 2008
2Objectives
- Participants will
- improve their graphical presentations
- be able to more critically evaluate the graphical
presentations of others - identify the limitations and shortcomings of
PowerPoint presentations
Thank you Erin Ash Patricia Hudes
3Who is Ed Tufte?
- The maven on how to effectively present
information - especially statistical and
quantitative information - Professor Emeritus at Yale
- Prolific writer
- Founder Graphics Press
- Courses throughout USA
- Galileo of Graphics
- da Vinci of Data
4Tufte Course October 5, 2006 Cincinnati
- Enlightening and entertaining
- Information rich
- PROVOCATIVE
- Extremely helpful in improving my own activities
of information presentation - Allowed me to apply basic principles to the
evaluation of presentations of others
5Tuftes 4 Books
6Topics Explored
- History
- Music
- Art
- Medicine
- Stock Market
- Birds
- Astronomy
- Fish
- Architecture
- Sports
- Magic
- Genetics
- Cancer
- Space Flight
7Spiritually Moving Experience
- To witness original books of Galileo
- making a presentation is a moral act as well -
Beautiful Evidence, page 9 - Well reasoned and honest presentations have the
potential to be life saving poorly reasoned or
dishonest presentations can be life harming
8Tufte on Galileo
9William Playfair (1759-1823)
The inventor of most of the common graphical
forms used to display data the scatterplot, line
plots, bar chart and pie chart.
- His The Commercial and Political Atlas, published
in 1786, contained a number of interesting
time-series charts such as these.
10Excellence in statistical graphicsCommunicating
complex ideas with
- Clarity
- Precision
- Efficiency
The Visual Display of Quantitative Information -
Ed Tufte 2nd edition, page 13
11Escaping the Flatland
- We should make things as simple as possible,
but not simpler." - - Albert Einstein
"We envision information in order to reason
about, communicate, document, and preserve that
knowledge -- activities nearly always carried out
on two-dimensional paper and computer screen.
Escaping this flatland and enriching the density
of data displays are the essential tasks of
information design. - Edward R. Tufte,
Envisioning Information
12Graphical Display Should
- Show the data
- Induce the viewer think about substance
- Avoid distorting what the data have to say
- Present many numbers in a small space
- Make large data sets coherent
- Encourage the eye to compare different pieces of
data - Reveal the data at several levels of detail
- Serve a reasonably clear purpose description,
exploration, tabulation, or decoration - Be closely integrated with the statistical and
verbal description of the data set
The Visual Display of Quantitative Information -
Ed Tufte 2nd edition, page 13
13Tufte's Grand Principles of Design
- show comparisons
- show causality
- show more than 1 or 2 variables
- integrate word knowledge and image
- document everything and tell your audience
about it - presentation stands or falls on the quality,
integrity, and relevance of the content - show your information at once, adjacent in
space, rather than stacked in time
14The single biggest threat to learning the truth
from a presentation is "cherry picking" data.
15Anscombes Quartet
- For all 4 sets of data
- N 11 (x,y) pairs
- Mean of Xs 9.0
- Mean of Ys 7.5
- Equation of regression line
- Y30.5X
16Anscombes Quartet
17The Nobel Prize to Brown and Goldstein for
describing Familial Hypercholesterolemia came
about because they appreciated the significance
of the high cholesterol outliers
Distribution of Serum Cholesterol
Controls
Myocardial infarction survivors
18Statistics are like a bikini what they reveal is
suggestive, but what they conceal is vital.
19Cholera EpidemicLondon 1854
Dr. John Snow
20Tufte's nomination for one of the best graphics
ever producedCharles Minard's Graph of
Napoleon's Invasion of Russia
21New York Citys Weather for 1980
1,888 numbers that tell a story
22Good Example Cancer Rates
23Good Example Genealogy of Pop Rock Music
24Good Example SARS
25Good Example
Comparative Chromosomes
- from L to R
- Man
- Chimpanzee
- Gorilla
- Orangutan
26If you could upgrade one aspect of your computer
system, what part of your system would you choose
to improve upon or enhance in capacity?
27Data Density
Data density ( of entries in data
matrix)/(area of graphic)
- Note that low data densities on computer displays
force us to view information sequentially, rather
than spatially, which is bad for comprehension. - Good quality graphics are
- Comparative
- Multivariate
- High density
- Able to reveal interactions, comparisons, etc
- And where nearly all of the ink is actual data ink
28 Tufte's first three principles for displaying
information
- Above all else, show the data
- Maximize the data-ink ratio
- Erase non-data ink
29Data-Ink
- Data-ink ratio
- data-ink
- total ink used to print the graphic
- Maximize the data-ink ratio, within reason
- Erase non-data ink, within reason
30Maximize Data/Ink Ratio
The labeled, shaded bar chart displays the height
in six ways
- the height of the left line,
- the height of the right line,
- the height of the shaded region,
- the position of the horizontal bar,
- the position of the number above the bar, and
finally - the number itself.
31Information Dense
32 Aspect Ratio
The aspect ratio is vital because it has a large
impact on our ability to judge rate of change. A
number of studies in visual perception have
shown that our ability to judge the relative
slopes of line segments on a graph is maximized
when the absolute values of the orientations of
the segments are centered on 45 degrees. -
Cleveland
33Sparklines in Medical Care
34Sparkline in Medical Care
35Sparklines in Finances
36Sparklines in Sports
37Pie Chart An Inferior Choice for Graphical
Display of Information
Estimation of U.S. Population as Percent of World
Population, January 2002 (source US Census)
38Pie Chart versus Table
Item 1 5
Item 5 57
Item 2 89
Item 4 87
Item 3 27
39Dragons of Eden
Sagan
versus
Tufte
40Edward Tufte, The Cognitive Style of PowerPoint
41Tuftes Criticism of PowerPoint Presentations
- Elevates format over content
- LOW information density
- Information is stacked in time
- For school children, hinders the writing of
meaningful sentences - Stifles information design creativity
42Cancer Rates by Site, 1973-2003
- Consider an important and intriguing table of
survival rates for those with cancer relative to
those without cancer for the same time period.
Some 196 numbers and 57 words describe survival
rates and their standard errors for 24 cancers.
43Applying the PowerPoint templates to this nice,
straightforward table yields an analytical
disaster. The data explodes into six separate
chaotic slides, consuming 2.9 times the area of
the table. Everything is wrong with these
smarmy, incoherent graphs the encoded legends,
the meaningless color, the logo-type branding.
- They are uncomparative, indifferent to content
and evidence, and so - data-starved as to be almost pointless.
Chartjunk is a clear sign of statistical
stupidity. Poking a finger into the eye of
thought, these data graphics would turn into a
nasty travesty if used for a serious purpose,
such as helping cancer patients assess their
survival chances. To sell a product that messes
up data with such systematic intensity, Microsoft
abandons any pretense of statistical integrity
and reasoning.
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45Avoid Chartjunk
- The interior decoration of graphics generates a
lot of ink that does not tell the viewer anything
new. The purpose of decoration varies to make
the graphic appear more scientific and precise,
to enliven the display, to give the designer an
opportunity to exercise artistic skills.
Regardless of its cause, it is all non-data-ink
or redundant data-ink, and it is often
chartjunk. - Ed Tufte
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48Grand Rounds and PowerPointSocratic Dialogue
Gives Way to PowerPointLawrence AltmanNew
York Times, December 12, 2006
- Grand rounds are not so grand anymore
- .and the Socratic dialogue has given way to
PowerPoint.
49Evolution of Medicine
PATIENT CARE
Written Narrative
EMR
TEACHING
Patient Focused
Powerpoint
1970
2010
2000
50Challenger O Ring Damage
History of O-Ring Damage in Field Joints
51How the Data Could Have Been Presented
52Tufte Tips for Oral Presentations
- At beginning of talk, tell audience
- What the problem is
- Why the problem is important
- What the solution to the problem is
- Know your content
- Practice, practice, practice
- Show up early something good will happen
- Give a written handout (Word not PowerPoint)
- Get out from behind podium Be demonstrative
- Never apologize
- Finish early
53Escaping the flatland is the essential task of
envisioning information for all the interesting
worlds (physical, biological, imaginary, human)
that we seek to understand are invariably and
happily multivariate in nature - Ed Tufte
54Good design is clear thinking made visibleBad
design is stupidity made visible
www.edwardtufte.com