Data of the Day: “Who’s Paying for the President?”

Our data visualization expert Justin Joque pointed us to this infographic, which we discussed over our face-to-face meeting. We thought you’d enjoy hearing our conversation and considering this as an example for your students’ discussion.

If you were sharing this with a class, you might open up the conversation with an open question like, “What do you see/notice?

As your students respond, here are some aspects you could consider unpacking with your students to not only have an interesting conversation but also connect them to some of the important and critical thinking questions behind visualizations.

  • What is the “story” of this infographic? Is it clearly told? How? What are the elements that you see that tell this story?
  • Romney and Obama have very different-looking heads. How does the size clarify or obfuscate?
  • Is there an unstated point of view? What is it? How do you know? How does this point of view influence how you see the information?
  • Notice the artistic choices the creator makes (e.g., 7.6% is a different font size from 25.5%). How do these choices change the way you understand the data?
  • Do the colors imply that some funds are “good” sources and some “bad”? What do you make of this?
  • How (or in what order) did you read this? Left to right? Up and down? Inside/outside? How did this change the way you took in and comprehended the information?
  • By using the heads as the “container” for the visualized content, it means that the 7.6% and 25.5% are not proportional. Is this useful? What implicit message might this visual choice be giving, apart from the data itself?
  • What is the message the creator wants you to get? How do design elements emphasize or detract from that message?
  • How might visualizing this differently (e.g., a pie chart or bar graph) communicate this data differently? How would different visualizations influence the way the message was delivered to viewers or readers?
  • Are the artists who create visualizations responsible for showing only the data, or is some artistic license to add impact OK or even desirable?
  • What did you learn after a few minutes of discussing this infographic that you didn’t notice at first? In other words, how did time help you incubate, refine, or augment your understanding?
  • What role might confirmation bias play in this graphic? Is it geared toward Obama voters?
  • What can you elicit from a critical reading of the text surrounding the visual?

About Kristin Fontichiaro

Kristin Fontichiaro is the principal investigator of this IMLS-funded project and a clinical associate professor at the University of Michigan School of Information.