A (Visualization) Case for WikiLeaks
--D. Thiebaut 04:14, 11 November 2010 (UTC)
Contents
This page is a short presentation illustrating how high quality data visualization is being performed in the area of journalism. As an example, we focus here on the 391,832 documents released Oct. 22, 2010 by WikiLeaks which have been the source and focus of data visualizer, creating compelling, effective, and effective data visualization.
Jeff Jarvis pointed out the link between Wikileaks data, journalism and stunning visualizations in his blog post Big Brother's Big Brother in Buzzmachine.com.
Lauren Kirchner of the Columbia Journalism Review dedicates a whole article on how the New York Times and the Gardian organized visualizations around the Wikileaks data in "Visualizing the Iraq War Logs, How The New York Times and The Guardian did it" she says: Al Jazeera English, for instance, made several basic charts, graphs, and maps for readers to click through, and an animated map of IED attacks across Iraq. Der Spiegel created an interactive map of a single day of violence, as did the Times and the Guardian (though they all chose different days). The New York Times’s maps of violence in Baghdad are, like most Times graphics, clean, informative, and straightforward. The Guardian’s Flash-animated and text-narrated map of one day in the fall of 2006, plays like a very understated documentary film, and is much more emotionally affecting.
War Data:Visualization of Afghanistan Hotspots Using Wikileaks Data
- Authors: Mike Dewar, Drew Conway, John Myles White, and Harlan Harris
- Published: Taming Data.com
- Implementation: R (code available on github.com)
- Reported by JEWEL WARD, War Data: Visualization of Afghanistan Hotspots Using Wikileaks Data, 2010/10/26, on Taming Data.com
- Mike Dewar says This is a visualisation of activity in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2009 based on the Wikileaks data set. Here we’re thinking of activity as the number of events logged in a small region of the map over a 1 month window. These events consist of all the different types of activity going on in Afghanistan.
The intensity of the heatmap represents the number of events logged. The colour range is from 0 to 60+ events over a one month window. We cap the colour range at 60 events so that low intensity activity involving just a handful of events can be seen – in lots of cases there are many more than 60 events in one particular region. The heatmap is constructed for every day in the period from 2004-2009, and the movie runs at 10 days per second.
- Example of data filtering from a page on github.com:
: Iraq War Logs
This visualization can be found in Der Spiegel.
: A Deadly Day in Baghdad
This visualization can be found in the New York Times on-line pages.
: A day in the life of the war
This visualization can be found in the on-line pages of The Guardian.