The work that visualisation conventions do
The work that visualisation conventions do
This paper argues that visualisation conventions work to make the data represented within visualisations seem objective, that is, transparent and factual. Interrogating the work that visualisation conventions do helps us to make sense of the apparent contradiction between criticisms of visualisations as doing persuasive work and visualisation designers’ belief that through visualisation, it is possible to ‘do good with data’ [Periscopic. 2014. Home page. Retrieved from http://www.periscopic.com/]. We focus on four conventions which imbue visualisations with a sense of objectivity, transparency and facticity. These include: (a) two-dimensional viewpoints; (b) clean layouts; (c) geometric shapes and lines; (d) the inclusion of data sources. We argue that thinking about visualisations from a social semiotic standpoint, as we do in this paper by bringing together what visualisation designers say about their intentions with a semiotic analysis of the visualisations they produce, advances understanding of the ways that data visualisations come into being, how they are imbued with particular qualities and how power operates in and through them. Thus, this paper contributes nuanced understanding of data visualisations and their production, by uncovering the ways in which power is at work within them. In turn, it advances debate about data in society and the emerging field of data studies.
715-735
Kennedy, Helen
d36ab149-2c2c-4798-b47a-f7b9db5ab83d
Hill, Rosemary
2811670f-8519-4802-9982-4871639fa8d7
Aiello, Giorgia
a9b09ddb-dee8-4020-9a74-2e6930559392
Allen, William
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
2 June 2016
Kennedy, Helen
d36ab149-2c2c-4798-b47a-f7b9db5ab83d
Hill, Rosemary
2811670f-8519-4802-9982-4871639fa8d7
Aiello, Giorgia
a9b09ddb-dee8-4020-9a74-2e6930559392
Allen, William
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Kennedy, Helen, Hill, Rosemary, Aiello, Giorgia and Allen, William
(2016)
The work that visualisation conventions do.
Information, Communication & Society, 19 (6), .
(doi:10.1080/1369118X.2016.1153126).
Abstract
This paper argues that visualisation conventions work to make the data represented within visualisations seem objective, that is, transparent and factual. Interrogating the work that visualisation conventions do helps us to make sense of the apparent contradiction between criticisms of visualisations as doing persuasive work and visualisation designers’ belief that through visualisation, it is possible to ‘do good with data’ [Periscopic. 2014. Home page. Retrieved from http://www.periscopic.com/]. We focus on four conventions which imbue visualisations with a sense of objectivity, transparency and facticity. These include: (a) two-dimensional viewpoints; (b) clean layouts; (c) geometric shapes and lines; (d) the inclusion of data sources. We argue that thinking about visualisations from a social semiotic standpoint, as we do in this paper by bringing together what visualisation designers say about their intentions with a semiotic analysis of the visualisations they produce, advances understanding of the ways that data visualisations come into being, how they are imbued with particular qualities and how power operates in and through them. Thus, this paper contributes nuanced understanding of data visualisations and their production, by uncovering the ways in which power is at work within them. In turn, it advances debate about data in society and the emerging field of data studies.
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 February 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 March 2016
Published date: 2 June 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 499791
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499791
ISSN: 1369-118X
PURE UUID: ac0bbcef-b303-4ecd-955f-d32a3f3de88e
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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2025 16:37
Last modified: 26 Apr 2025 02:12
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Contributors
Author:
Helen Kennedy
Author:
Rosemary Hill
Author:
Giorgia Aiello
Author:
William Allen
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