Visualisations, Animations, Experiments

Over the past few years, I've experimented with various forms of visualisations (using D3.js, the GapMinder Motion Chart), and various other technical bits'n'bobs (various Python scripts for example, using the Natural Language Toolkit). I've listed a few examples below. Most experiments will be posted up on Labs, or referenced by the blog.

A Few Examples:

A Visualisation of Attention Hungry UK Government Cabinet Ministers

A Visualisation of Attention Hungry UK Government Cabinet Ministers

A #D3.js visualisation of twelve senior UK government cabinet ministers, all desperate to be the centre of attention. Each with their own fanfare too.

 

Preview of a Refined Practice Visualisation and Chart Tool

Refined Practice: Visualisation and Chart Tool

Early preview of our Visualisation and Chart Tool over at Refined Practice. Using D3.js (and in the future using other technologies) this enables non-technical editors to publish sophisticated interactive visualisations and charts on a variety of web platforms.

 

D3: Reusable D3 With The Queen, Prince Charles, a Corgi and Pie Charts

D3: Reusable D3 With The Queen, Prince Charles, a Corgi and Pie Charts

Little demonstration of a technique for writing reusable D3. Based upon techniques outlined in the www.bleedingedgepress.com book. Full technical write-up here.

 

Analysing & Visualising 2.5 Million News and Politics Search Queries for the BBC

Child Benefit versus the Budget

During the summer of 2012, I carried out an analysis of 2.5 millions News and Politics search queries for the BBC, as part of their BBC News Labs projects. Taking the data from Experian Hitwise and the BBC's own internal analytics, I visualised the data using the GapMinder Motion Chart). It was powerful analysis, highlighting revealing insights into public opinion. The data was also referenced in this blog post: Are We Interested in Nadine Dorries?