NEWSPAPER DESIGN

sharing thoughts

Information

Graphics

Members: 39
Latest Activity: Jan 21, 2012

Themes For A Good Infographic

by Connie Malamed

Chronology of NASA Missions by Carlos Gámez from Lainformacion

Information graphics give us new ways to understand and think about information. They include a huge category of visuals that are capable of communicating in diverse ways through charts, maps, diagrams, data visualizations and technical, instructional and scientific explanations. It seems that infographics become more valuable as our need to understand a complex world increases.

Recently, I spent a good part of a week sorting through and judging infographics that were submitted to the Malofiej 18, a competition and world summit for visual journalists and infographic artists held in Pamplona, Spain every year. There, I saw consistent design themes that made certain visuals stand out because they were comprehensible and compelling.

Here’s a summary of what I think makes an infographic effective. I’d like to hear what you think so please add your own criteria in the Comments section. You can click on each graphic to see the original in context.

It provides a new way of seeing and thinking>


Taking Apart the Federal Budget by Wilson Andrews, Jacqueline Kazil, Laura Stanton, Karen Yourish from The Washington Post.


The purpose of the information graphic is to provide a new way of understanding concepts, ideas and data through visual language. Because our brains are wired for pictures, infographics are understood differently than text alone. Often, a visual promotes a unique way of thinking about information because we’re able to perceive new relationships, improve our analysis and form different interpretations. In the dissection of the US federal budget above, the varied sizes of the money streams and the movement of input and output help the viewer better understand a complex budget
The information tells a story

The Ebb and Flow of Movies by Mathew Bloch, Lee Byron, Shan Carter and Amanda Cox from the NY Times

Many effective infographics tell a story, since they are often produced by visual journalists. It might be an explanation of how a laser printer works or an explanation of a bat’s wings in flight, but there’s a story there. I think this is what statistician, John Tukey, meant when he wrote that the main purpose of analyzing numerical data is to describe phenomena rather than to simply present the information. The story derived from the numbers or the explanation provides the context, focus and interest that draws in an audience.

In the interactive visualization above, the NY Times informs readers that, “Summer blockbusters and holiday hits make up the bulk of box office revenue each year, while contenders for the Oscars tend to attract smaller audiences that build over time. Here’s a look at how movies have fared at the box office, after adjusting for inflation.” Now that’s a story.

The information is well-organized

Aftermath of the Haiti Earthquake by Emily Schwartzman

A primary aspect of an effective information graphic is its organization, expressed through visual structure. When the information is orderly and chunked into segments—and not all infographics can do this—it makes it easier to process the visual information. According to cognitive research, we can only hold about four or five perceptual units in working memory at one time. When information is organized into small bits, therefore, it is attuned to our innate cognitive architecture.

It works on multiple levels

Where We Live by Joe Lertola, Time Magazine

I think it’s important that an infographic works on at least two levels. On initial viewing, you want to give viewers the big picture concept. At first glance, it’s good if someone can immediately get the overview, like the most important trends or the largest population centers or a quick comparison. This gives your audience a sense of what the graphic is about and where to focus. Then viewers can begin to analyze the next level, which involves examining and interacting with the detailed information.


The scale is accurate

Part of Cancer in Spain graphic from Lainformacion

In many charts, diagrams and statistical maps, the elements represent quantities so its important that the scale and the proportions are accurate. Viewers assume that when a bar is twice as long as another bar, it means the quantity is twice as much. And when a circle on a statistical map has half the area of another circle, we interpret it as meaning the quantity is half as much as the larger circle. Although it’s a simple concept, it can be difficult to be precise. This is particularly true when using the area of a symbol to represent quantity. That’s when you need to rely on mathematical formulas rather than your design eye.

The visual is well-designed

Part of Literary Organism by Stefanie Posavec

Information is beautiful. An aesthetic infographic can reflect this beauty by making good use of color, contrast, balance, movement, white space and typography. In the visualization above, the artist depicts the structure of Jack Kerouac’s On The Road through graceful blossoms of chapters, paragraphs, sentences and words. (Note: This graphic is included in my book, Visual Language for Designers.)

The graphic stands on its own

Part of Coffee Drinks Illustrated graphic by Lokesh Dhakar

Although infographics often accompany an article or a text explanation, isn’t it good when they can just stand on their own? It means the visual explanation works and the textual support is doing its job. And since the eye and brain are compelled to look at a picture first, it’s important that the infographic can be at least partially understood without the accompanying article, if there is one.

Well, these are some of the themes that make compelling infographics in my estimation

courtesy:understandinggraphic.com

Discussion Forum

Wonderful soccer infographics from Oscar Corvera

Started by tksajeev. Last reply by Dhanesh v a Aug 7, 2010. 2 Replies

Guidelines for Designing Tables

Started by tksajeev Aug 6, 2010. 0 Replies

You Must See This

Started by tksajeev. Last reply by Shital Verma Jul 6, 2010. 1 Reply

Tips for good infographics

Started by tksajeev. Last reply by kishor Jul 1, 2010. 3 Replies

Oil spill graphic by USA Today on page one

Started by tksajeev. Last reply by Karthikeyan M Jun 7, 2010. 1 Reply

World Cup Soccer Stadiums-2010

Started by tksajeev Jun 4, 2010. 0 Replies

The visual story of a street

Started by tksajeev May 11, 2010. 0 Replies

Comment Wall

Comment

You need to be a member of Graphics to add comments!

Comment by Carlos Gámez Kindelán on April 9, 2010 at 5:45am
Comment by Noé García Gutiérrez on April 8, 2010 at 6:04am
Thanks and congratulations for the work they are doing.
 

Members (39)

 
 
 

SND19(Asia and South Pacific

 

Society for News Design - Region 19

(Asia and South Pacific)

Region 19 covers Asia and the South Pacific, including India, Australia, Japan, Indonesia and Southeast Asia.For more details about its activities contact Sajeev Kumar T.K

Regional Director 19 @tksajeev@gmail.com

 

READ MORE SND NEWS

SND Lifetime Achievement Award:Gayle Grin

our favorite designers and an SND board member for many years with the highest honor the Society can bestow: The Lifetime Achievement Award. This person’s creative work and leadership at papers in Canada have been an inspiration and her enthusiastic, smart and tireless work on behalf of SND has benefited us all.

Read more

SND Lifetime Achievement Award:Roger Fidler

The Society for News Design is proud to present its Lifetime Achievement Award to an innovator, leader, teacher, founder and friend: Roger Fidler.

Read more

Cristobal Edwards named SND international director

The international director helps optimize training and support opportunities for professionals, students and educators across various regions around the globe.

Read more

All about SND membership

Soon  SND will be very active in India.The first step is the appointment of Regional director

Read more 

Blog Posts

How to install hindi fonts?

Posted by saumya.india on September 25, 2011 at 12:06am 1 Comment

Hello guys. I am trying the QuarkXpress 30 day trial for Mac. Could somebody help me, how to install fonts used in hindi newspaper such as chanakya etc. How can we install 4Clipika. Also I could not find STY editor in Mac. Thanks

Latest Activity

geeta bisht replied to tksajeev's discussion Richard Johnson:From the war zone
"work beyond imagination... no words to say. I am speechless after reading the article. But…"
Tuesday
neeraj saxena posted photos
Monday
DEEPAK NIVRUTI PAWAR posted photos
May 17
Ariel Garofalo posted a status
May 16

Badge

Loading…

Birthdays

Birthdays Today

© 2013   Created by tksajeev.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service