Transcript
o5pX2qR0GSg • Visualizing Data—and What it Means to Make Information Tangible | Sciencing Out | PBS
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Kind: captions Language: en [Applause] oh hi i didn't see you there [Laughter] [Music] how long is a waiting line consisting of 24 king cobra stretch end to end how heavy would a large school must be if it's only filled with clones of nicolas cage sometimes it's pretty hard to get a sense of numbers or imagine what they mean but thankfully they're experts in the world whose job is to make those numbers tangible one of these people was florence nightingale a dedicated nurse a pioneer of modern nursing and a statistician who made lasting changes to britain's health care system another is mona chalabi a data journalist who's dedicated to visualizing everything from how hairy you are to vaccination rate two healthcare inequalities based on race and ethnicity let's start with florence's story time machine 1854 please during the crimean war in scutari what is now ushkodar a district of modern day istanbul you might know her as a lady with a lamp that nurse who saved lives during the crimean war of the 1850s the hospital guru florence nightingale named after the italian city of her birth florence she was a strong-willed kind of awkward and also an educated lady who at one point cared for a tiny pet owl named athena but it's also important to recognize that florence was a strong supporter of the british colonial rule that caused the death and subjugation of indigenous people all around the world through her writing we know that she believed that imposing the british culture and norms and other people to be very necessary for the expansion of the british empire the alternative and i'm quoting here would be simply preserving their barbarism for the sake of preserving their lives so yeah florence and many other iconic science figures throughout history have problematic stories many times their contributions to their societies came at horrible costs to other people impacting their lives even today so as we talk about these figures we have to be aware of the complicated legacies that these people have okay back to the crimean war when florence was dispatched to a hospital in scutari wounded british soldiers ended up at this hospital where florence was in charge of supervising 38 nurses she was going around trying to take care of the wounded as best as she could getting them food clean utensils and towels making the hospitals more resistant to the cold weather and providing cleaner water but many of the soldiers there were dying from illnesses unrelated to their actual battle wounds things like typhus typhoid and cholera why you ask look at this place it's filthy i mean look at this it's a rat it's you you you it's looking a bandage now why hey hey bring it back and there it goes the rat stole the bandage wow yeah okay this place is legit filthy eventually the british government sent out supplies and people to help clean up the hospitals and after that the death rate super plummeted okay fast forward some years and the war is over florence is back in england and everyone is like oh my god it's fun it's a fangirl fan though you're so great you're so famous we love you bubble but florence is not about the celebrity glam life you see florence was not only a capable nurse but as i said before she was also a great statistician and she didn't forget the lessons she learned during the crimean war so when florence got back to england she was very adamant to prove her point using stats stats dance so with some help she started collecting numbers from military hospitals near the battleground and from military hospitals across britain so how many people died here and was that from the battle wounds or was it like um the filth literally killed them and based on those numbers she confirmed her hunch hey y'all we need to make our hospitals cleaner soldiers in the hospitals are dying from all the dirt and poop and sewers infecting them rather than the wounds themselves she prepared a whole report to prove her point but she knew it couldn't be a regular report you know a big boring one filled with numbers that none of the ministers or decision makers are going to understand who's going to read that so she took refuge in data visualization she gathered up all her data and put them in a fancy looking chart that turned all the numbers into an easy to understand image each wedge corresponds to a different month from april 1854 to march 1856 see the blue parts those are all the deaths from diseases not war wounds the pink sections are war-related deaths from injuries suffered on the battlefield and the black bits are other causes of death florence's use of data visualization to show the importance of sanitation in hospital was a big deal like when i decided to never again get bangs with her visualization it was pretty obvious what was really causing all the deaths soldiers were 10 times more likely to die from diseases spread through filth than from battle wounds themselves so florence proposed that parliament do something to improve overall public health you see hygiene was not just a problem in hospitals but also a problem in the streets and homes of people in england poop poop everywhere and all that dirt was getting people really sick eventually parliament passed the public health act of 1875 which forced landlords to connect their pads to main sewage lines life expectancy in england went up so hooray for data and no more poop on the street this is one of the first moments that we know of where data visualizations successfully influence public policy data visualization can help us understand numbers and figures better and that's not just limited to pie charts bar charts or that chart with lots of dots on it yep that one data visualization can get fun and creative too like the work of mono chalabi the superstar data journalist i grew up in east london um where i was raised by my parents who were both iraqi immigrants when i was much younger i really really loved maths i found it really kind of exciting and satisfying but that feeling of satisfaction kind of really quickly started to slip away when i went to college i had grown up in an area of east london that was incredibly multicultural all kinds of different people lived around us all kinds of different cultural backgrounds and then i kind of like landed in this college campus that was overwhelmingly white sounds familiar i remember how it felt sometimes to be the only brown person in the room it's isolating socially and you start questioning your own knowledge experiences and expertise and on top of all of that moana had to deal with a topic that just felt very disconnected so initially i had tried to study economics and philosophy and the further that you got into economics the more that these formulas were just presented to you as abstract i have a really clear memory of kind of sitting in this university auditorium and looking at this textbook that had this formula in it and i found it really difficult to grasp those concepts and also to care about them when they weren't attached to the real world i just didn't really care anymore eventually mona dropped out of the undergrad program to go to the land of croissant and camembert france not to study baghetology which obviously i would but to do a masters in international relations during her degree mona started working on a project that involved lots of data collection i really enjoyed making the charts i would kind of obsess for hours over things like the font and the placement and the colors that i'd use they stay in people's memories better and they have greater impact my role was to take all of this statistical data about what iraqis needed specifically iraqis who had been displaced as a result of the conflict and then to create figures that could be taken to international donors to say hey this is what these iraqis need can you supply those goods those services so i recall one particular conference where there was an iraqi that was there who was responsible for actually conducting the questionnaires themselves and he said to us you know you gave us surveys to ask the iraqis do you need food or blankets but what we actually need is electricity generators and that just wasn't on the survey and it was just so transparent how data can create self-fulfilling prophecies this idea of a feedback loop that you see the world one day and that reinforces that vision of the world and then recreates the world as it is it became so clear to me the importance of disseminating information as widely as possible but also especially to get the information in front of people who you're claiming to represent at its base data journalism is about representation right a chart is claiming to represent a constituency of people and very often those people didn't ask necessarily to be represented in that way so the very least you can do is ask those people did we get it right so obviously the natural path for her after this experience was data journalism communicating data to more and more people but yet again like in college mona found herself surrounded by people and ideas that felt just not at all like her i first moved to the us to work for a data journalism site i was really excited to be working with other data journalists but we didn't have the same approach to journalism their goal was to communicate to people who described themselves as geeks and nerds it was an almost entirely white male organization i was the only person of color with only immigrant writing on staff it was just awful like i was repeatedly made to feel like an outsider and so i just quickly became quite depressed really i recall one situation in particular really vividly we were sitting in a conference room and we were talking about how to cover the uk general election and i recall one of the editors saying you know who could we have to cover the uk election and i'm sitting there in this room with 25 people that i've worked with for a year i'm the only british person in the room they know that i covered politics in the uk before coming to join them and there was a pause and then one of the editors was like of course i know who we could ask and he mentioned the name of a guy who is american who was still in college and up until that point the only thing he had written for us were a couple of pieces about the joys of scrabble and i was just like okay like you don't see me at all like there's no point me saying to you i'm qualified to do this mona's job was to make information visible but she herself felt invisible even the data she was working with did not really represent her it was just so disconnecting eventually though mona found a platform and a style that really worked for her and that made her feel seen again i started to draw these data visualizations that i would put up on instagram even though it sounds superficial to have the validation of strangers seeing your work and saying a this makes sense to me and b this is useful information for me to have really solidified my identity as a journalist and that i could do this and so i just leaned into doing more of that i started to create more and more of these hand-drawn data visualizations and yeah kind of haven't stopped since mona has visualized many data sets from topics related to animal extinction to police brutality and even the cost of living or dying monad downloads data from different databases and then gets to work she has a pretty unique style imperfect lines whole numbers none of those percentages estimated to the second decimal point what does that even mean her style is just very human when most people look at a computer-generated graphic it presents the world with these sharp edges and this degree of precision that feels like it's not quite true to our lift experience i think i'm communicating that uncertainty is inherently a shaky line and that's the way that we know the world for example somewhere between five and ten percent of women doing x it's not down to decimal places so um i really wanted to communicate the uncertainty with which we understand the world around us as a way to build trust data visualization is not just arranging numbers on a page or a screen it's about telling stories about the data breathing life into the numbers and it's important for people to feel represented and seen in those stories like what mono is trying to do also data visualization can serve different purposes whether it's to improve conditions in hospitals through policy or bringing attention to social or environmental issues we just have to be creative caring and find a space for all of us in the numbers a waiting line consisting of 24 king cobras stretched end to end would be only a few feet longer than the statue of liberty is tall a large school bus filled with nicolas cage clones would weight as much as two t-rexes