Presenting Data: How to Communicate Your Message Effectively

Author:   Ed Swires-Hennessy
Publisher:   John Wiley & Sons Inc
ISBN:  

9781118489598


Pages:   152
Publication Date:   26 September 2014
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Presenting Data: How to Communicate Your Message Effectively


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Full Product Details

Author:   Ed Swires-Hennessy
Publisher:   John Wiley & Sons Inc
Imprint:   John Wiley & Sons Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.390kg
ISBN:  

9781118489598


ISBN 10:   1118489594
Pages:   152
Publication Date:   26 September 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

List of Tables vii List of Figures ix Introduction xiii Preface xvii Acknowledgements xix 1 Understanding number 1 1.1 Thousands separator 2 1.2 Decimal separator 3 1.3 Level of detail in comparisons 4 1.4 Justification of data 5 1.5 Basic rounding 7 1.6 Effective rounding 9 Notes 16 2 Tables 17 2.1 Position of totals in tables 17 2.2 What is a table? 19 2.3 Reference tables 19 2.4 Summary tables 22 2.5 How tables are read 24 2.6 Layout of data in tables 25 2.7 Capital letters for table titles and headings in tables 29 2.8 Use of bold typeface 30 2.9 Use of gridlines and other lines in tables 30 Notes 31 3 Charts (bar charts, histograms, pie charts, graphs) 33 3.1 How the user interprets charts 33 3.2 Written aims for charts 35 3.3 Scale definition and display 37 3.4 Difference between bar charts and histograms 49 3.5 Pie chart principles 51 3.6 Issues with pie charts 55 3.7 Graph principles 63 3.8 Issues with graphs 64 3.9 Pictogram principles 79 3.10 Comparative charts: Multiple pies, multiple bar charts, double scale graphs 82 3.11 Graphics 88 3.12 Three-dimensional charts 90 Notes 92 4 Numbers in text 93 4.1 Numbers written as text 94 4.1.1 Correct numbers 94 4.1.2 Clear numbers 94 4.1.3 Concise numbers 95 4.1.4 Consistent numbers 96 4.2 Ordering of data 97 4.3 Technical terms 98 4.4 Plain language 100 4.5 Emotive language 102 4.6 Key messages 103 Notes 105 5 Data presentation on the Internet 107 5.1 The early years 110 5.2 Statistics on CD-ROMs 113 5.3 Data on the Internet 116 5.4 Charts on the Internet 120 5.5 Text on the Internet 128 Notes 130

Reviews

<p> The words that describe the data, and the messages it may have, must also be correct, clear, concise and consistent, and the author devotes a chapter to ensuring that the expert s hard work is not undone by commentary that is too technical or too laboured to be understood by non-expert audiences. (Significance, 1 February 2014)


Highly recommended to a very wide audience. (Mathematical Association of America, 1 January 2015) Presenting data is, of course, more than a good table or an informative graphic. The words that describe the data must also be correct, clear, concise and consistent, and the author devotes a chapter to ensuring that the expert's hard work is not undone by commentary that is too technical or too laboured to be understood by non-expert audiences. (The Royal Statistical Society, 1 February 2015) This book must be mandatory to any data analyst and statistician, and indeed anyone who presents numeric data. The word numeric is important, as non-numeric data are not discussed in the book. (ENBIS News, 10 December 2014) The words that describe the data, and the messages it may have, must also be correct, clear, concise and consistent, and the author devotes a chapter to ensuring that the expert's hard work is not undone by commentary that is too technical or too laboured to be understood by non-expert audiences. (Significance, 1 February 2014) The book is easy to read and can be consumed in a single train journey. It is also easy to look at and the illustrations and graphics occupy as much space as the text. The author has indeed put his money where his mouth is and the graphics both illustrate his points and makes them alone. The highlight for me was in the chapter on tables where the author reduces a table containing seven columns and five rows to a two by two table which beautifully makes the point when previously it had been lost in a forest of figures... This is an excellent book and I would recommend it as essential reading to anyone who is writing a thesis or dissertation, making a presentation or writing a paper. That's all of us. (Occupational Medicine, 15th February 2016)


Highly recommended to a very wide audience. (Mathematical Association of America, 1 January 2015) Presenting data is, of course, more than a good table or an informative graphic. The words that describe the data must also be correct, clear, concise and consistent, and the author devotes a chapter to ensuring that the expert s hard work is not undone by commentary that is too technical or too laboured to be understood by non-expert audiences. (The Royal Statistical Society, 1 February 2015) This book must be mandatory to any data analyst and statistician, and indeed anyone who presents numeric data. The word numeric is important, as non-numeric data are not discussed in the book. (ENBIS News, 10 December 2014) The words that describe the data, and the messages it may have, must also be correct, clear, concise and consistent, and the author devotes a chapter to ensuring that the expert s hard work is not undone by commentary that is too technical or too laboured to be understood by non-expert audiences. (Significance, 1 February 2014)


Author Information

Ed Swires-Hennessy, Statistical Consultant, UK Ed Swires-Hennessy was a government statistician until his retirement in 2010. His teaching on statistical presentation has continued and he currently delivers a one day course on Presenting Data for the Royal Statistical Society (RSS). In 2003 he was awarded the RSS JH West medal for outstanding contribution and influence on the dissemination of official statistics.

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