Data visualization, particularly with medical informatics. Although doctors have been demonstrated to think more visually than the general population, health IT physician interfaces are almost exclusively text based. Inspired visual data, medical and otherwise, will be showcased here.

1/24/10

Understanding Pie Charts

Understanding Pie Charts: "

Chocolate Pie Chart

From: http://eagereyes.org/techniques/pie-charts

A little-known alternative to the round pie chart is the square pie or waffle chart. It consists of a square that is divided into 10x10 cells, making it possible to read values precisely down to a single percent. Depending on how the areas are laid out (as square as possible seems to be the best idea), it is very easy to compare parts to the whole. The example: women and girls in IT and computing-related fields.



Girls in IT-related areas waffle chart


1/18/10

How tablet design can influence the potency of the Placebo effect

How tablet design can influence the potency of the Placebo effect: "

We all know that design influences people emotionally, but have you ever considered the possibility that possibility that design alone can actually influence the health of your users? This article by Steve Silberman on wired.com (August ‘09) discusses the psychology of tablet design and the placebo effect:


“[...] the placebo response is highly sensitive to cultural differences. Anthropologist Daniel Moerman found that Germans are high placebo reactors in trials of ulcer drugs but low in trials of drugs for hypertension—an undertreated condition in Germany, where many people pop pills for herzinsuffizienz, or low blood pressure. Moreover, a pill’s shape, size, branding, and price all influence its effects on the body. Soothing blue capsules make more effective tranquilizers than angry red ones, except among Italian men, for whom the color blue is associated with their national soccer team [...]“




Excerpt from Steve Silberman's Wired.com article


Sadly, the information in the above box is presented, in typical wired.com style, without reference to any actual research. If you want to read more, you may want to check out Meaning, Medicine and the ‘Placebo Effect’, a book written by Daniel Moreman (the anthropologist mentioned in the quote).


→ Found via Hacker News.




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