Accessibility of data visualizations : An overview of European statistics institutes

Author(s):  
Mikael Snaprud ◽  
Andrea Velazquez

Access to public data is important for people to stay informed. Access to visualizations of national statistics can be essential in order to take part in political discussions and so to shape a democratic society. In this chapter we investigate accessibility for people with disabilities to data visualizations from a selection of European National Statistics Institutes (NSIs). We outline related practices and approaches to accessibility improvements and propose a way to evaluate and compare accessibility aspects of data visualizations. The findings indicate that in contrast to the recently harmonized European legal requirements, the degree to which the data visualizations meet the requirements, and the approaches to meet them, are very different among the NSIs across Europe.

2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 376-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dian Yu ◽  
Xiao Xiao ◽  
Douglas K. Bemis ◽  
Steven L. Franconeri

Across the natural world as well as the artificial worlds of maps, diagrams, and data visualizations, feature similarity (e.g., color and shape) links spatially separate areas into sets. Despite a century of study, it is yet unclear what mechanism underlies this gestalt similarity grouping. One recent proposal is that similarity grouping—for example, seeing a red, vertical, or square group—is just global selection of those features. Although parsimonious, this account makes the counterintuitive prediction that similarity grouping is strictly serial: A green group cannot be constructed at the same time as a red group. We tested this prediction with a novel measure—a grouping illusion within number-estimation tasks that should work only if participants simultaneously construct groups—and found the strongest evidence yet in favor of serial feature-based attention ( Ns = 14, 12, and 12 for Experiment 1, Experiment 2, and Experiment 3, respectively).


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophia C. Tintori ◽  
Patrick Golden ◽  
Bob Goldstein

AbstractAs the scientific community becomes increasingly interested in data sharing, there is a growing need for tools that facilitate the querying of public data. Mining of RNA-seq datasets, for example, has value to many biomedical researchers, yet is often effectively inaccessible to non-genomicist experts, even when the raw data are available. Here we present DrEdGE (dredge.bio.unc.edu), a free Web-based tool that facilitates data sharing between genomicists and their colleagues. The DrEdGE software guides genomicists through easily creating interactive online data visualizations, which colleagues can then explore and query according to their own conditions to discover genes, samples, or patterns of interest. We demonstrate DrEdGE’s features with three example websites we generated from publicly available datasets—human neuronal tissue, mouse embryonic tissue, and a C. elegans embryonic series. DrEdGE increases the utility of large genomics datasets by removing the technical obstacles that prevent interested parties from exploring the data independently.


Author(s):  
Andra Waagmeester ◽  
Daniel Mietchen ◽  
Siobhan Leachman ◽  
Quentin Groom

Here we present how two independent infrastructures, Wikimedia and iNaturalist, can be jointly leveraged to improve content on both platforms. iNaturalist.org began as a Master's final project in 2008 and grew to a globally used app to help identify biodiversity. The community behind iNaturalist consists of citizen scientists, who record a species existence through photos or sound recordings. The Wikimedia Foundation provides a spectrum of resources, of which Wikipedia is the most famous sibling. Other siblings we address here are Wikimedia Commons and Wikidata. Commons is the platform where open licensed media can be shared. Wikidata is the linked knowledge graph, where public data can be stored as structured data. Basically, data goes to Wikidata, images and recordings go to Commons and text goes to Wikipedia. Initially, both Commons and Wikidata served primarily the approximately 300 language versions of Wikipedia. However, nowadays both Commons and Wikidata are also being used as is, that is in other contexts than Wikipedia. Although iNaturalist and the Wikimedia family of repositories thrive as independent infrastructures and are thus maintained independently from each other, they can be mutually beneficial to each other. Content created by the iNaturalist community can be very valuable to the Wikimedia community. Firstly, observations in the form of photos and sound recordings can be stored on iNaturalist, with an open and compatible license that can provide valuable illustrations and structured knowledge on biodiversity. Wikipedia articles can be enriched with already approximately 1.2M photos from observations. Furthermore, the assertions made by the iNaturalist community can act as references in various Wikidata claims or Wikipedia articles. In many cases in Wikipedia, we have to rely on personal annotations by the picture taker, who stores it on Wikimedia’s multimedia Commons. iNaturalist provides images of organisms with stronger - peer-reviewed - assertions on the subject in the picture. When a cat is called a cat in Wikipedia or Commons, it is the iNaturalist community that either approves or rejects that claim. In the opposite direction, iNaturalist relies on knowledge described in Wikipedia. It includes Wikipedia articles about taxa on its website. Images can also be uploaded into iNaturalist from Commons. It is therefore possible to add images of museum specimens into iNaturalist to assist with taxon identification. Other citizen science apps do exist. iNaturalist, however, is particularly interesting due to the feature that it allows its users to select from a selection of licenses, of which some are compatible with the licenses upon which content from the Wikimedia family is available. Wikidata uses a CC0 - public - license for its data, Wikipedia is available under a CC-BY-SA and Commons content uses a selection of Creative Commons licenses (Table 1). iNaturalist is also a particular good fit with Wikimedia, because both have a global and multilingual scope. This is a great example of how platforms can support each other's missions by simple policy decisions, such as open licencing, that underpin interoperability.


Author(s):  
Julia Zoraida Posada Ortiz

In this article I will summarize a small scale project carried out at a private university in Bogotá, with eight undergraduate students. The project aimed at finding out what their oral discourse informed me about their beliefs regarding gender and ethnicity. It also had two other purposes: First, to give the students the opportunity to reflect upon the complexity of the world we live in and the many perspectives involved in this complexity and second, to make students active participants in a democratic society. To achieve these goals a selection of texts written by non-canonical, female and Afro-American writers was given to the students. I conducted five informal interviews, which were audio-taped. The analysis of the responses given by the students showed that there is an internalisation of the values which characterises the Western society we live in. A society ruled by dichotomies such as male/female, white/black and rich/poor, who perpetuatepower relations that favor certain groups over others.The students became active participants by becoming more critical and making decisions about how to improve further editions of the textbook they currently use and suggesting the editors to create a more inclusive book.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-218
Author(s):  
Magdalena Rogalska

The article shows the next steps to be taken in the project consisting in building a new home using elements of demolition of houses built of wooden beams. It was established 31 elements of the investment process, described legal requirements and details of implementation. Statistical analysis was performed with a view to determine the purchase price of the old log house. The analysis was based on data collected from an online auction. Taken into account the following data: the price of the old house, the price of 1 m2 of the house, state in which the house is built, the material from which made the roof surface.


Author(s):  
Luis Delgado-Ponce ◽  
Oscar Joel Vargas-Hernández ◽  
Johnny López-Flores ◽  
Teresa Geraldine Cárdenas-Arellano

For the Universidad Tecnológica de Salamanca it has been necessary and very important its building become sustainable, therefore, the sun is an energy option to achieve it, this study shows the use of clean energy to produce electrical energy, the objective is to use the photovoltaic effect using technology and regional suppliers, so that when it is a sunny day, electricity is generated and when this resource is not available, the service of the electricity company, CFE in Mexico provides it. It begins by locating within the globe the point where the SFVI (interconnected photovoltaic system) will be installed, in this case latitude 20.577136 and longitude -101.232293, there are two requirements prior to meeting, which has to do with the selection of the location, the first It refers to technical aspects, such as solar resources, type of terrain and the shadows that could be generated in the place, according to the fulfillment of legal requirements and necessary permits for the selected place. The criteria used in the Interconnected photovoltaic system are shown, to achieve sustainability for Universidad Tecnológica de Salamanca.


2021 ◽  
Vol 570 (9) ◽  
pp. 25-34
Author(s):  
Patrycja Zielińska

The aim of the organization, beliefs, convictions, school organization, youth about the person who is inactive in the context of the organization. Efforts were also made to capture the currency in the assessment of problems between school and university youth. A total of 1084 respondents took part in the points. A deliberate and random selection of people from the following Swedish regions was used: Opole, Silesia, Podlasie, Dolnośląskie, Lublin, Świętokrzyskie, Mazowieckie, Małopolskie, Podkarpackie. On the basis of the analysis, it can be done that there is something to do, there is no transition to tolerance, acceptance and resourcefulness towards people.


Author(s):  
Jerzy Norbert Grzegorek

The article is devoted to the dance culture of people with disabilities from the perspective of its practice. It can be limited to internal activities and the implementation of dance creativity within the framework of artistic culture. It becomes important to justify the selection of methods of this practice based on the constitutive features of this culture and their individual dimensions: teleological, axiological, methodical and evaluation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 48
Author(s):  
Surti Wardani ◽  
Arif Siaha Widodo

There are two Hermina Hospitals in South Tangerang. Although they have implemented a marketing communication strategy but not the Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) model. This research aims to describe the marketing communication strategy used by the Hermina Hospital in South Tengerang. The focus of this research is on how marketing communication is available at the two Hermina Hospitals in making marketing communication models so that the services delivered are integrated. The method of this research is descriptive qualitative by observing the public. Data obtained by interviewing informants. The selection of research informants was by using purposive sampling method to obtain information about tyhe characteristics of the hospital service user community. The results of the study produced an integrated marketing communication model can be used as a basis for making policies in increasing hospital publicity.Keywords: Strategy, Model, Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC).


Author(s):  
David John Wickens

South Africa's public procurement system is accorded constitutional status, establishing fundamental requirements for the operation of the system. The application of these constitutional system requirements and their interpretation in the judicial adjudication of procurement cases have highlighted the tension between the administrative, or process-centric, legal requirements and the system-centric nature of procurement procedures. The importance of a deterministic approach for procurement decision-making can be considered from two angles – the certainty of the procurer in the conformity of its own conduct and external certainty to diminish the risk of unnecessary challenge. This article revisits the foundational rationale for system-based procurement procedures and associated decision-making for its potential for finding a deterministic approach to balancing the legal requirements, both system- and process-based. These principles are tested against a selection of adjudicated outcomes to formulate practical recommendations for practitioners aimed at deterministic decision-making in the procurement process.


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