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HOW TO MAKE SCIENTIFIC VISUALIZATIONS THAT SHINE
by
Heidt, Amanda
in
Artificial intelligence
/ Audiences
/ Design
/ Designers
/ Icons
/ Medical research
/ Science
/ Scientists
/ Typography
/ Visualization
2024
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HOW TO MAKE SCIENTIFIC VISUALIZATIONS THAT SHINE
by
Heidt, Amanda
in
Artificial intelligence
/ Audiences
/ Design
/ Designers
/ Icons
/ Medical research
/ Science
/ Scientists
/ Typography
/ Visualization
2024
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Journal Article
HOW TO MAKE SCIENTIFIC VISUALIZATIONS THAT SHINE
2024
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Overview
Identify your audience You wouldn't write a popular-science talk as you would a research paper, and the same goes for visualizations (see 'Focus on basic design principles'). [...]they say, it's better to design a range of items - an infographic for social media, a visual abstract and a figure for a seminar presentation, for instance - using the same information. \"The difference here is that the data that we're training on isn't just random data from the Internet, it's our massive library of vetted icons,\" says Aoki, adding that humans must still provide the final stamp of approval. Hierarchy * Let the graphic match the flow of the language used. Because most languages read from leftto right, you might want to design your graphic to 'start' at the top left. * Use numbers, bold and italicized lettering, and different font sizes to guide the reader through the image. * Use left- or right-justified text.
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