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OverviewAfter more than 15 years of development drawing on research in cognitive psychology, statistical graphics, computer science, and cartography, micromap designs are becoming part of mainstream statistical visualizations. Bringing together the research of two leaders in this field, Visualizing Data Patterns with Micromaps presents the many design variations and applications of micromaps, which link statistical information to an organized set of small maps. This full-color book helps readers simultaneously explore the statistical and geographic patterns in their data. After illustrating the three main types of micromaps, the authors summarize the research behind the design of visualization tools that support exploration and communication of spatial data patterns. They then explain how these research findings can be applied to micromap designs in general and detail the specifics involved with linked, conditioned, and comparative micromap designs. To compare and contrast their purposes, limitations, and strengths, the final chapter applies all three of these techniques to the same demographic data for Louisiana before and after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Supplementary websiteOffering numerous ancillary features, the book’s website at http://mason.gmu.edu/~dcarr/Micromaps/ provides many boundary files and real data sets that address topics, such species biodiversity and alcoholism. One complete folder of data examples presents cancer statistics, risk factors, and demographic data. The site includes CCmaps, the dynamic implementation of conditioned micromaps written in Java, as well as a link to a generalized micromaps program. It also contains R functions and scripts for linked and comparative micromaps, enabling re-creation of all the corresponding examples in the book. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Daniel B. Carr , Linda Williams PicklePublisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: CRC Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 21.00cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 28.00cm Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9781420075731ISBN 10: 142007573 Pages: 182 Publication Date: 29 April 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAn Introduction to Micromaps. Research Influencing Micromap Design. Data Visualization Design Principles. Linked Micromaps. Conditioned Micromaps. Comparative Micromaps. Putting It All Together. Appendices. References. Index.Reviewsmicromaps are an effective tool and the book explains them at length, with lots of examples, so that non-statisticians can understand and use them.! the graphic displays in this book are clear and straightforward ! --International Statistical Review (2011), 79, 1 The book is extremely well written. I was totally absorbed by chapters one through four. It is obvious that the authors are in total command of the topic and bring years of experience in the field to the project. The authors understand what areas need special attention and explanation. The language flows nicely and the text is illustrative and entertaining. The limitations of micromaps are known and discussed. The reader gains a good understanding of what they are for and what they can and cannot accomplish. --Oliver Schabenberger, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina, USA This is a terrific book and it introduces some clever tools. --David Berrigan, NIH/NCI Overall, I found the book is well-researched and informative. It uses lucid and easy to understand language. Additionally, the book contains numerous colorful micromap variations that visually illustrate design principles and real-world applications. It clearly shows the authors' enthusiasm for micromaps and their deep knowledge of the subject. Anyone with basic training in statistics can understand most of the materials covered in this book. So, I highly recommend this book for a diverse audience who are interested in exploring and presenting their data in a joint statistical and spatial context. --Samson Y. Gebreab, University of Michigan, in The American Statistician, August 2011 ...micromaps are an effective tool and the book explains them at length, with lots of examples, so that non-statisticians can understand and use them.! the graphic displays in this book are clear and straightforward ! --International Statistical Review, 2011 The book is extremely well written. I was totally absorbed by chapters one through four. It is obvious that the authors are in total command of the topic and bring years of experience in the field to the project. The authors understand what areas need special attention and explanation. The language flows nicely and the text is illustrative and entertaining. The limitations of micromaps are known and discussed. The reader gains a good understanding of what they are for and what they can and cannot accomplish. --Oliver Schabenberger, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina, USA This is a terrific book and it introduces some clever tools. --David Berrigan, NIH/NCI micromaps are an effective tool and the book explains them at length, with lots of examples, so that non-statisticians can understand and use them.! the graphic displays in this book are clear and straightforward ! --International Statistical Review (2011), 79, 1 The book is extremely well written. I was totally absorbed by chapters one through four. It is obvious that the authors are in total command of the topic and bring years of experience in the field to the project. The authors understand what areas need special attention and explanation. The language flows nicely and the text is illustrative and entertaining. The limitations of micromaps are known and discussed. The reader gains a good understanding of what they are for and what they can and cannot accomplish. --Oliver Schabenberger, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina, USA This is a terrific book and it introduces some clever tools. --David Berrigan, NIH/NCI Author InformationDaniel B. Carr is Professor of Statistics at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. Building on his early experience in developing static and dynamic graphics at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Dr. Carr continues to use new data as the motivation to create new graphics. He has taught statistical graphics to hundreds of graduate students in the computational data sciences. For more than 30 years, he has developed graphical and computational methods for exploratory visualization and has collaborated with researchers at several federal agencies, including working with Dr. Pickle at the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Dr. Carr is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. Linda Williams Pickle is principal and chief statistician at StatNet Consulting, LLC in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and Adjunct Professor of Geography and Public Health Services at Pennsylvania State University. She has devoted more than 30 years to the cancer research community, working for the National Cancer Institute (NCI), the Vincent T. Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University, and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). Dr. Pickle has published extensively about the spatial patterns of disease, including the award-winning Atlas of United States Mortality, which was the first of its kind to use statistical modeling in the background and to produce age-specific mortality rates based on modeled data. She is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |