Description
Book SynopsisStatistical graphing was born in the seventeenth century as a scientific tool, but it quickly escaped all disciplinary bounds. Today graphics are ubiquitous in daily life. Michael Friendly and Howard Wainer detail the history of data visualization and argue that it has not only helped us solve problems, but it has also changed the way we think.
Trade ReviewThe invention of graphs and charts was a much quieter affair than that of the telescope, but these tools have done just as much to change how and what we see. -- Hannah Fry * New Yorker *
An indispensable account of how important practitioners of data visualizations write the history of their field. -- Crystal Lee * Information & Culture *
We live in an era of data dependence—never before have graphic representations of data been as essential and sought after as at this moment…There has not been a publication of this scope on the evolution of graphic representation of qualitative and quantitative data since Funkhouser’s work…Scholars, practitioners, lovers of statistics and data visualization, and anyone interested in understanding the methods and techniques of today will benefit from understanding the innovations that brought us to where we are. -- María del Mar Navarro * Journal of Design, Economics, and Innovation *
A thoughtful and well-written introduction to the world of data visualization and its history. -- Bill Satzer * MAA Reviews *
An intellectually fascinating book…The audience for this book is wide. It would be useful to professionals and to professors in many departments such as psychology, sociology, economics, biology, physics, and any department that uses graphs to display quantitative information. It is a book to broaden your knowledge and offer interesting asides for lectures and meetings…Consult it frequently to learn of the stories of the developers of the many graphic methods we use today. -- Malcolm James Ree * Personnel Psychology *
A marvel of research scholarship…This is the sort of book that one can browse and sample in bite-size chunks as the mood seizes, encountering curious delights while doing so. -- Bert Gunter * Significance *
A masterly study of graphic innovations, their context, and their scientific use. This brilliant book, without equivalent, is an indispensable read. -- Gilles Palsky, coauthor of
An Atlas of Geographical WondersFriendly and Wainer are the Watson and Crick of statistical graphics, showing us the history of the DNA structure that is the code of life for innovative visualizations. -- Ben Shneiderman, founder of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab, University of Maryland
Data expertise is a fundamental prerequisite for success in our digital age. But exactly how, and when, have we learned to draw conclusions from data? For decades, Michael Friendly and Howard Wainer have been studying how data has informed decision-making, through visualization and statistical analysis. Replete with mesmerizing visual examples, this book is an eye-opening distillation of their research. -- Sandra Rendgen, author of
History of Information GraphicsMichael Friendly and Howard Wainer have given us a wonderful history of the dazzling field of data visualization. They bring new life to ancient death statistics and describe the artistic poetry used to display numbers. An intriguing story of how we have learned to communicate data of all types. -- Stephen M. Stigler, author of
The Seven Pillars of Statistical WisdomTwo of the most distinguished scholars of data visualization give us a glimpse of ancient attempts to quantify the world, before revealing the century-long revolution that led to the invention of modern statistics and many of the graphical methods we use today. I learned a lot from this book, and I think you will too. -- Alberto Cairo, author of
How Charts Lie: Getting Smarter about Visual InformationFriendly and Wainer demonstrate the amazing progress that has been made in data graphics over the past two hundred years. Understanding this history—where graphs came from and how they developed—will be valuable as we move forward. -- Andrew Gelman, coauthor of
Regression and Other Stories