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01 Use pencil and paper 02 Content is first 03 Do not draw graphs by hand 04 Do not enlarge numbers 05 Use words, not just images 06 Use small multiples 07 Do not bungle the meaning 08 Do not create op-art 09 Do not use little dots for numbers 10 Do not use colors (to be memorized) 11 Sort by value, not category 12 Equally space time intervals in timelines 13 Avoid meaningless concept maps 14 You can use small type 15 Do not screen type 16 Psychology of perception Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for Better Data Visualizations Some of these principles are based in part on Edward Tufte’s books and workshops. To print more booklets: bit.ly/1bhDU4y Thanks (and apologies) to my students for showing details from their various projects. Pino Trogu © February 2020 – Second edition – trogu.com Pino Trogu Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for Better Data Visualizations Every graphic is an ad hoc construction, therefore these rules can be broken depending on the context. However you should try to do the graphic by following these rules first and break them later if necessary. San Francisco State University College of Liberal and Creative Arts School of design DES 523 Information Design 1: Data Visualization February 2020 info design handbook 2013 duplex printing booklet 2 UP from 3.6875x5.75.indd 1 8/11/13 1:22 PM

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Page 1: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

01 Usepencilandpaper

02 Contentisfirst

03 Donotdrawgraphsbyhand

04 Donotenlargenumbers

05 Usewords,notjustimages

06 Usesmallmultiples

07 Donotbunglethemeaning

08 Donotcreateop-art

09 Donotuselittledotsfornumbers

10 Donotusecolors(tobememorized)

11 Sortbyvalue,notcategory

12 Equallyspacetimeintervalsintimelines

13 Avoidmeaninglessconceptmaps

14 Youcanusesmalltype

15 Donotscreentype

16 Psychologyofperception

Small Handbook of Information Design:16 Principles for Better Data Visualizations

SomeoftheseprinciplesarebasedinpartonEdwardTufte’sbooksandworkshops.To print more booklets: bit.ly/1bhDU4yThanks(andapologies)tomystudentsforshowingdetailsfromtheirvariousprojects.PinoTrogu©February 2020–Secondedition–trogu.com

Pino Trogu

Small Handbook of Information Design:16 Principles for Better Data Visualizations

Everygraphicisanadhocconstruction,thereforetheserulescanbebrokendependingonthecontext.Howeveryoushouldtrytodothegraphicbyfollowingtheserulesfirstandbreakthemlaterifnecessary.

SanFranciscoStateUniversityCollegeofLiberalandCreativeArtsSchool of design

DES523InformationDesign1:DataVisualizationFebruary 2020

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Page 2: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

Notes: Notes:

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Page 3: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

16 Psychology of perception

Beawareofthefollowingtermsrelatedtocognitivepsychologyandpsychologyofperception:workingmemory,co-constructionofmeaning,backgroundknowledge,conventionsofrepresentation,cultural(visualandverbal)conventions,context,genre,theannotationlayer,closure.

Formoreinformationaboutthetermsabove,readmytwopapers:The Four-Second Windowhttp://bit.ly/Ve2mphandThe Double Constraints of Convention and Cognition in Successful Graphic Designhttp://bit.ly/12zLinLVisitURLstodownloadthePDFsofthearticles.

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Intheearlyandlaterphasesofaproject,simplyusepencilandpaperasyourdesigntools,usegraphpaperifneeded,tosketchideas,tryoutdesigns,andworkoutyourproposal.Workonyourideasandyourconceptsbysketchingyourvisualizations.Solveproblemsthroughsketchingbyhand,notbystaringatacomputerscreen.

01 Use pencil and paper

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Page 4: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

02 Content is first

Contentisfirst,formissecond.Selectinterestingcontent.Content-lessstuffproducesform-less,uninformativevisualizations.Thismeansthatyouneedoneormoredatasetsthatarerichwithdata.Manycolumnsandmanyrows(lotsofdatapoints)arebetterthanjusttwodatapoints.Forexample,twopercentages:25and75areinthemselvesnotveryinterestinganditwouldbehardtopulloffaninterestingvisualizationbasedonjustthosetwonumbers.

15 Do not screen type

Everyfontisawonderfulandbeautifuluniverseuntoitself.Dowereallyneedtotinkerwithwhatisalreadyaverysophisticatedsignsystem?Donotreverse,screen(maketints),border,condenseorexpandtype.Donotitalicizetypebypressingthe“oblique”button.Useafontthatalreadyhasawiderangeofweights.Traditionalold-styleitalicfontsarebesttosavespaceifneeded,astheyarenaturallycondensedandweredesignedforthispurpose.Donotletyourtextlinesrunlongerthantwo-and-a-halftimesthealphabet–about60characters.Breakupthebigtextboxesintotwoormorecolumnswhenevernecessarysothatyourmeasure(boxwidth)is“measured”andcorrect.Donotjustifytextifpossible,useflushleft/raggedright(FL/RR).

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Page 5: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

14 You can use small type

Youcanusesmalltypeinabigposter.Useasmanysizesasneeded.Arangefrom16-18ptto24ptisthebestsizerangeformosttextonaposter,excludingthemaintitleandpossiblythesubtitle,withevensmallersizesforcaptionsandlabels.Forshorttexts,use24pt.Sometimes30ptforlargertextcanbeused.Ingeneral,imaginethatyou’restanding20to30inchesfromtheposter.Atthisdistance,youshouldbeabletoreadmosttextelementsinthelayout.

H. PA

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03 Do not draw graphs by hand

Donottakeanumericaltableorspreadsheetandthenrendertheshapes(thebars,thelines)byhand,evenifyou’reusingIllustrator.Rather,takethedatasetandprocessitthroughadatavisualizationprogram,suchasR,Excel,orother.ThenbringthefileintoIllustratortocleanupandfine-tunelineweights,typography,color,etc.

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Page 6: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

04 Do not enlarge numbers

Donotturndatapointsintostand-aloneenlargednumberswithapercentagesignnexttothemtomakethemlookimportant.Fillingupyourvisualizationwithsuch“visuals”isnotanybetter,andmightinfactbeworse,thanjusthavingplaintext,withno“visualizations”atall.AninfographicisnotaPowerPointtemplate.Thebestthingtodoistocombinewordsandimagestogether.

13 Avoid meaningless concept maps

Avoidmeaninglessconceptmapsandnetworkgraphs.Forasimplereason:theyincludeonthepagetoomanyitemsandabstractconceptsatonce.Ourworkingmemory(short-termmemory)allowsustoholdinmemoryonlyafewitems(4-7)foraveryshorttime(2-4seconds)beforewehavetomoveon.Conceptmapslookverycoolbuttheyarealsoveryuninformativeandlittleinformationisretainedfromtheminourlong-termmemory.Generally,thethingoneremembersfromthemistheirvaguevisualform–theshapeofthegraph–ratherthanthemoreimportantsubjectmatter.

N. M

ITCH

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Page 7: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

12 Equally space time intervals in timelines

Keepthespacingequal(forequalperiodsoftime)evenifthatresultsinbiginformationgapswithincertainperiodsoftime.Gapsareasmeaningfulasperiodsofconcentratedactivity.Whendataisconcentratedwithinafewyears,usetypographyandothermeanstomakeeverythingreadablewhilekeepingthetemporalspacingevenandcorrect.

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05 Use words, not just images

Usesentences:subject,verb,object.Closeyourclauses.Setupanintroductionandfollowthroughwithvisualizations.Useatitle,asubtitle,anintroduction,maintextifneeded,labels,captions,credits(forpictures)call-outs,footnotes,sources(fordatasets),andasignature(colophon).Thisiscalled“theannotationlayer”.Plus,youcanincludenumericaltables,ifneededandappropriate,withinthevisualization.

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Page 8: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

06 Use small multiples

Contentisking.Onesingleblown-upgraphicisnotsogood,especiallyifit’sjustshowingveryfewdatapoints.Don’tbestingy.Forexample,apiechartshowing25and75percentandfillingupawholeposterisnotsogood.It’smuchbettertohaveahighnumberofelementsevenifthey’resmall,likeinageographicmap.Twentylittlepiesarebetterthanonegiantpie.Tenlittlelinegraphsarebetterthanasinglegiantlinegraph.

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11 Sort by value, not category

Sortbyperformance(value),notalphabetically.Whenpartoftheinformationiscategoricalbutincludesvaluesforeachcategory,donotsortthecategoriesalphabetically.Instead,sortbythevaluesforeachofthosecategories.Forexampleifthecategoriesareproductsorstatesandeachisavalue,sortbythevalue,notbythealphabeticalnamesofthestatesorthenamesoftheproducts.

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Page 9: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

10 Do not use colors (to be memorized)

Donotusecolorsifthereaderhastomemorizethem.Donotusecolorsifyouhavetohavealegendforeverysinglecolorinordertounderstandthegraphic.Ifnolegendisrequired,thenlittlethinkingisneededinordertoperceivethegraphic.Toomanycolorsinthegraphtakeahugetollontheattentioncapacityofthereader.Onecannotrememberallthosecolorsbecausewecanonlyrememberasmallsetofthingsatonce:five-seven.Also,colorsdonothaveanintrinsicorder,thereforetheyshouldnotbeusedtosortthings,unlessyouusevalueaswell:darkercolorformore,lightercolorforless,bothbeingfromthesamehueortwodiverginghuesmaximum.

07 Do not bungle the meaning

Donotbunglethemeaningofyourvisualization.Saywhatyoumeananddonotconfusethereader,startingwithyouropeningtitleandsubtitle.Thisappliestochoiceofwordsaswellaspictures.Forexample,ifthetopicis“Tuitionfeeincreases”donotsay:“FeehikesonMountEverest”;sayinstead:“Feeincreasesreachnewhigh”.Ifthetopicis“BlackFriday(shopping)”,donotsay:“Productscheapasablacksheep”;sayinstead:“BlackFridaykeepsmoregreeninyourwallet”.Ifthetopicis“Christmasshopping”,donotsay:“ChristmasshopperspraytoGodforbiggerdiscounts”;sayinstead:“ConsumerismandreligionmixintraditionalChristmasholiday”.Donotplaylooselywithironyandpuns,anddon’tmix-upyourmetaphors.

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Page 10: Small Handbook of Information Design: 16 Principles for

08 Do not create op-art

Donotmakeop-art(opticalart)effectsbyusingboldcondensedsans-seriffontswherethestrokesarethesamewidthasthecountersinthefontandalsothewidthofthespacingbetweentheletters.Thiscreatesaveryannoying,vibratingcheckerboardeffect.Donotusesolidbackgrounds,boxes,thickborders,orarbitraryboldtype.Ifyouareusingsolidbackgroundsthroughout,invertthewholeimagetoseeifit’sbetterwiththeoppositevalues.OnaMac,usecontrol-option-command-8toinstantlyinvertthecolorsofyourscreenonthecomputer.Seeifitwouldbebettertheotherwayaround(blacktypeonwhitebackground).Ifnothingisgainedbythesolidfills,thengetridofthem.

D. M

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TINEZ

09 Do not use little dots for numbers

Donotuselittledotsforpercentages.Donotuselittlepeopleforquantities.Donotvisualizequantitiesbytheendlessrepetitionofsingleunitslikelittledotsorlittlesquares.Wedon’tusepebblestocountanymore,andwehaveinventedatoolcalled“placevalue”.It’sbettertowriteoutthenumberortovisualizeitusingasinglesolidarea,notmanytinyareasinlittlerows.Donotuselittlepeopleasunitstoshowquantities,evenifthequantitiesrepresentpeople.Thinkofthosepoorlittleguyswhoselimbsgetmutilatedwhenyouhavetorepresentafraction:arms,legs,evenheadsgetcutoffwithoutmercy!

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Link to my article onOtto Neurath (rule # 9)added February 12, 2019: t.co/E5yN3U7EYq