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Visual Display of Quantitative Information
Envisioning Information
Visual Explanations
Beautiful Evidence
Seeing With Fresh Eyes
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Edward Tufte, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, pages 31, 116.
Edward Tufte, Envisioning Information, page 45.
Edward Tufte, Envisioning Information, pages 108 and 109.
My design of a bus schedule and route combines a graphical timetable with a route map overlaid on a precisely
detailed aerial photograph, so much richer than the typical schematic diagram of bus routes. Hourly, daily, and
weekly rhythms of the buses are clearly revealed, as well as details of each journey. During rush hours, lines
densely crowd into spaghetti--but then service is so frequent that the jumble of lines informs the rider simply to
show up, for there will be virtually no wait for whatever bus it is that arrives. The gray grid is set at ten-minute
intervals in order to ease visual interpolation of the times of arrival. The aerial photograph unveils the area mostly
at the level of house resolution, that is, with sufficiently fine details to show individual buildings. Indeed, the
reaction of those who live in the area is to explore the photograph, personalizing the data, seeking to discover their
own residence, school, or workplace. Same picture, but many stories.
-- Edward Tufte
Just a short note pointing out that the slopes of the lines change above/below the 14th & Washington Square stop, and those slopes also change throughout the day. Trains travel faster if the line is more vertical, and slower if more horizontal, although slopes can only be compared relatively above/below since distance is not captured in this display. Still, one can see that the 5:30 PM weekday train travels slowly compared to its neighbors, or that the last train weekday (slow then fast) behaves differently on Saturday (fast then slow).
-- ken mankoff (email)
Visualizing MBTA data
Mike Barry and Brian Card have used a lovely interactive Marey Diagram to visualize train movements on Boston's MBTA.
-- Chris Pudney (email)