Biography:Edward Tufte
Edward Tufte | |
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Tufte (age 73) during his one-day course in Dallas, May 21, 2015 | |
Born | [1] Kansas City, Missouri | March 14, 1942
Occupation | Professor, statistician, writer, sculptor |
Nationality | American |
Education | Stanford University Yale University |
Notable works |
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Scientific career | |
Thesis | The Civil Rights Movement and Its Opposition (1968) |
Doctoral advisor | Robert Dahl |
Website | |
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Edward Rolf Tufte (/ˈtʌfti/;[2] born March 14, 1942),[1] sometimes known as "ET",[3] is an American statistician and professor emeritus of political science, statistics, and computer science at Yale University.[4] He is noted for his writings on information design and as a pioneer in the field of data visualization.[5]
Biography
Edward Rolf Tufte was born in 1942 in Kansas City, Missouri, to Virginia Tufte (1918–2020) and Edward E. Tufte (1912–1999). He grew up in Beverly Hills, California, where his father was a longtime city official, and he graduated from Beverly Hills High School.[6] He received a BS and MS in statistics from Stanford University and a PhD in political science from Yale.[7] His dissertation, completed in 1968, was titled The Civil Rights Movement and Its Opposition. He was hired in 1967 by Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School as a lecturer of Politics and Public Affairs, where he steadily moved up to the rank of full Professor. He taught courses there in political economy and data analysis while publishing three quantitatively inclined political science books. In 1977, he left Princeton for Yale University, where he accepted an appointment as Professor of Political science, Statistics, and Computer science, as well as a Senior Critic in the School of Art. In 1999, these positions were made Emeritus.[8]
In 1975, while at Princeton, Tufte was asked to teach a statistics course to a group of journalists who were visiting the school to study economics. He developed a set of readings and lectures on statistical graphics, which he further developed in joint seminars he taught with renowned statistician John Tukey, a pioneer in the field of information design. These course materials became the foundation for his first book on information design, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information.[9][10]
After negotiations with major publishers failed, Tufte decided to self-publish Visual Display in 1982, working closely with graphic designer Howard Gralla. He financed the work by taking out a second mortgage on his home. The book quickly became a commercial success and secured his transition from political scientist to information expert.[9]
On March 5, 2010, President Barack Obama appointed Tufte to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act's Recovery Independent Advisory Panel "to provide transparency in the use of Recovery-related funds".[7]
Work
Tufte is an expert in the presentation of informational graphics such as charts and diagrams, and is a fellow of the American Statistical Association. He has held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences.
Information design
Tufte's writing is important in such fields as information design and visual literacy, which deal with the visual communication of information. He coined the word chartjunk to refer to useless, non-informative, or information-obscuring elements of quantitative information displays. Tufte's other key concepts include what he calls the lie factor, the data-ink ratio, and the data density of a graphic.[12]
Tufte uses the term "data-ink ratio" to argue against using excessive decoration in visual displays of quantitative information.[13] In Visual Display, Tufte explains, "Sometimes decoration can help editorialize about the substance of the graphic. But it is wrong to distort the data measures—the ink locating values of numbers—in order to make an editorial comment or fit a decorative scheme."[14]
Tufte encourages the use of data-rich illustrations that present all available data. When such illustrations are examined closely, every data point has a value, but when they are looked at more generally, only trends and patterns can be observed. Tufte suggests these macro/micro readings be presented in the space of an eye-span, in the high resolution format of the printed page, and at the unhurried pace of the viewer's leisure.[citation needed]
Tufte uses several historical examples to make his case. These include John Snow's cholera outbreak map, Charles Joseph Minard's Carte Figurative, early space debris plots, Galileo Galilei's Sidereus Nuncius, and Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial. For instance, the listing of the names of deceased soldiers on the black granite of Lin's sculptural memorial is shown to be more powerful as a chronological list rather than as an alphabetical one. The sacrifice each fallen individual has made is thus highlighted within the overall time scope of the war.[15] In Sidereus Nuncius, Galileo presents the nightly observations of the moons of Jupiter in relation to the body itself, interwoven with the two-month narrative record.[16]
Criticism of PowerPoint
Tufte has criticized the way Microsoft PowerPoint is typically used. In his essay "The Cognitive Style of PowerPoint", Tufte criticizes many aspects of the software:[citation needed]
- Its use as a way to guide and reassure a presenter, rather than to enlighten the audience;
- Its unhelpfully simplistic tables and charts, a design decision holdover from the low resolution of early computer displays;
- The outliner's causing ideas to be arranged in an artificially deep hierarchy, itself subverted by the need to restate the hierarchy on each slide;
- Enforcement of the audience's lockstep linear progression through that hierarchy (whereas with handouts, readers could browse and relate items at their leisure);
- Poor typography and chart layout, from presenters who are poor designers or who use poorly designed templates and default settings (in particular, difficulty in using scientific notation);
- Simplistic thinking—from ideas being squashed into bulleted lists; and stories with a beginning, middle, and end being turned into a collection of disparate, loosely disguised points—presenting a misleading façade of objectivity and neutrality that people associate with science, technology, and "bullet points".
Tufte cites the way PowerPoint was used by NASA engineers in the events leading to the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster as an example of PowerPoint's many problems. The software style is designed to persuade rather than to inform people of technical details. Tufte's analysis of a NASA PowerPoint slide is included in the Columbia Accident Investigation Board’s report -- including an engineering detail buried in small type on a crowded slide with six bullet points, that if presented in a regular engineering white paper, might have been noticed and the disaster prevented.[17][18]
Instead, Tufte argues that the most effective way of presenting information in a technical setting, such as an academic seminar or a meeting of industry experts, is by distributing a brief written report that can be read by all participants in the first 5 to 10 minutes of the meeting. Tufte believes that this is the most efficient method of transferring knowledge from the presenter to the audience and then the rest of the meeting is devoted to discussion and debate.[19]
Small multiple
One method Tufte encourages to allow quick visual comparison of multiple series is the small multiple, a chart with many series shown on a single pair of axes that can often be easier to read when displayed as several separate pairs of axes placed next to each other. He suggests this is particularly helpful when the series are measured on quite different vertical (y-axis) scales, but over the same range on the horizontal x-axis (usually time).[citation needed]
Sparkline
Sparklines are a condensed way to present trends and variation, associated with a measurement such as average temperature or stock market activity, often embedded directly in the text; for example: The Dow Jones index for February 7, 2006 .[20][21] These are often used as elements of a small multiple with several lines used together. Tufte explains the sparkline as a kind of "word" that conveys rich information without breaking the flow of a sentence or paragraph made of other "words" both visual and conventional. To date, the earliest known implementation of sparklines was conceived by interaction designer Peter Zelchenko and implemented by programmer Mike Medved in early 1998.[citation needed][22]
Sculpture
Beyond his academic endeavors over the years, Tufte has created sculptures, often large outdoor ones made of metal or stone,[6] that were first primarily exhibited on his own rural Connecticut property. In 2009–10, some of these artworks were exhibited at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut, in the one-man show Edward Tufte: Seeing Around.[23]
Hogpen Hill Farms
Hogpen Hill Farms, the 234-acre (95-hectare) Tufte sculpture garden in Woodbury, Connecticut, is open to the public on summer weekends.[24]
ET Modern
In 2010, Edward Tufte opened a gallery, ET Modern, in New York City 's Chelsea Art District"[3] at 11th Avenue and 20th Street.[25] The gallery closed in 2013.[26]
Bibliography
Works on political economy
- Brody, Richard A.; Tufte, Edward R. (March 1964). "Constituent-Congressional Communication on Fallout Shelters: The Congressional Polls". Journal of Communication 14 (1): 34–39. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.1964.tb02345.x.
- Ekman, Paul; Tufte, Edward R.; Archibald, Kathleen; Brody, Richard A (June 1966). "Coping with Cuba: Divergent Policy Preferences of State Political Leaders". The Journal of Conflict Resolution 10 (2): 180–97. doi:10.1177/002200276601000203.
- Tufte, Edward R. (1968), The Civil Rights Movement and Its Opposition.
- Edward R. Tufte reviewed work: Palumbo, Dennis J. (September 1970). "Statistics in Political and Behavioral Science". Journal of the American Statistical Association 65 (331): 1414–5. doi:10.2307/2284317.
- Lemieux, Peter H.; Kort, Fred; Pfotenhauer, David; Stewart, Philip R; Burnham, Walter Dean; Tufte, Edward R. (March 1974). "Communications". The American Political Science Review 68 (1): 202–13. doi:10.1017/S0003055400235478.
- Tufte, Edward R. (June 1974). "Electoral Reform: An Introduction". Policy Studies Journal 2 (4): 240–2. doi:10.1111/j.1541-0072.1974.tb00406.x.
- Edward R. Tufte reviewed work: Shultz, George P.; Dam, Kenneth W. (June 1979). "Economic Policy Beyond the Headlines". The American Political Science Review 73 (2): 605. doi:10.2307/1954949.
- Edward R. Tufte reviewed work: Cohen, Jacob; Cohen, Patricia (December 1979). "Applied Multiple Regression/Correlation Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences". Journal of the American Statistical Association 74 (368): 935. doi:10.2307/2286442.
- Hoffman, David; Matisse, Henri; Tufte, Edward R (1987). "The computer-aided discovery of new embedded minimal surfaces". The Mathematical Intelligencer 9 (3): 8–21. doi:10.1007/BF03023947.
- Edward R. Tufte reviewed work: Rose, Richard; Peters, Guy (June 1980). "Can Government Go Bankrupt?". The American Political Science Review 74 (2): 567–8. doi:10.2307/1960736.
Works of analytic design
- Tufte, Edward R (2001), The Visual Display of Quantitative Information (2nd ed.), Cheshire, CT: Graphics Press, ISBN 0-9613921-4-2, https://archive.org/details/visualdisplayofq00tuft.
- Powsner, SM; Tufte, Edward R (August 1994). "Graphical Summary of Patient Status". Lancet 344 (8919): 386–9. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(94)91406-0. PMID 7914312.
- Tufte, Edward R (1997), Visual Explanations: Images and Quantities, Evidence and Narrative, Cheshire, CT: Graphics Press, ISBN 0-9613921-2-6, https://archive.org/details/visualexplanatio00tuft.
Exhibitions
- Visual Explanations: Prints and Sculptures, 2000–1, New York: Artists Space.
- Escaping Flatland, Los Angeles: Architecture+Design Museum, 7 November 2002 – 13 February 2003, http://aplusd.org/exhibitions-past/edward-tufte.
- Seeing Around, June 13, 2009, to April 11, 2010, Ridgefield, Connecticut: Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, http://www.aldrichart.org/exhibitions/past/tufte.php. Unavailable 19 Feb. 2020.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Edward Tufte". Art Directors Club. 2004. http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/edward-tufte/.
- ↑ Tufte, Edward. "Pronunciation of "Tufte"?". https://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=00005F.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 The Many Faces (And Sculptures) of Edward Tufte, NPR, June 5, 2010, https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=127481819, retrieved 2010-06-06.
- ↑ Edward Tufte, Yale University: Political Science webpage.
- ↑ Yaffa, Joshua. "The Information Sage". Washington Monthly. http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/magazine/mayjune_2011/features/the_information_sage029137.php?page=1.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Reynolds, Christopher. "ART; Onward means going upward; Edward Tufte has spent his career fighting the visually dull and flat. Even his sculpture is a leap.", Los Angeles Times , November 14, 2002. Accessed April 23, 2008. "[Edward Tufte], who shares 20 acres (81,000 m2) in Cheshire, Conn., with his wife, graphic design professor Inge Druckrey, and three golden retrievers, is a 1960 graduate of Beverly Hills High School."
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts, White House Office of the Press Secretary, March 5, 2010, https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/president-obama-announces-more-key-administration-posts-3510.
- ↑ Tufte, Edward (2014-12-01), Resume, Edward R. Tufte, https://www.edwardtufte.com/files/ETresume.pdf, retrieved 2023-12-04
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Zachry, Mark; Thralls, Charlotte (2004), "An interview with Edward R. Tufte", Technical Communication Quarterly 13 (4): 447–462, doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1304_5, http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/s15427625tcq1304_5.pdf.
- ↑ Tufte 2001.
- ↑ Corbett, John. "Charles Joseph Minard: Mapping Napoleon's March, 1861". Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science. http://www.csiss.org/classics/content/58. (CSISS website has moved; use archive link for article)
- ↑ Mulrow, EJ (2002). "The Visual Display of Quantitative Information". Technometrics 44 (4): 400. doi:10.1198/tech.2002.s78.
- ↑ Kosslyn, Stephen Michael (2006). Graph design for the eye and mind. Oxford University Press. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-19-531184-6.
- ↑ Tufte 2001, p. 59.
- ↑ Tufte 2001b, pp. 43–44.
- ↑
- ↑ Tufte, Edward Rolf, "Analysis", Forum, http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0001yB&topic_id=1.
- ↑ Report, 1, Columbia Accident Investigation Board, August 2003, p. 15, http://anon.nasa-global.speedera.net/anon.nasa-global/CAIB/CAIB_lowres_chapter7.pdf, retrieved 2008-08-11.
- ↑ Tufte, Edward Rolf, PowerPoint Does Rocket Science—and Better Techniques for Technical Reports, http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0001yB.
- ↑ Oppenheimer, Diego. "Sparklines in Excel". The Microsoft Office Blog. Microsoft. http://blogs.office.com/b/microsoft-excel/archive/2009/07/17/sparklines-in-excel.aspx?PageIndex=2.
- ↑ Rimlinger, Fabrice. "Project Summary". Sparklines for Microsoft Excel. SourceForge. http://sourceforge.net/projects/sparklinesforxl/.
- ↑ Tufte, Edward. "Microsoft patent claim for "sparklines in the grid"". http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0003Y1.
- ↑ "Edward Tufte: Seeing Around". Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. http://www.aldrichart.org/exhibitions/past/tufte.php.
- ↑ "Hogpen Hill Farms: ET'S Landscape Sculpture Farm". https://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/hogpen-hill-farms.
- ↑ Tufte, Edward Rolf, ET Modern gallery opening, http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0003h7&topic_id=1, retrieved 2010-06-30.
- ↑ "Edward Tufte's Twitter feed". https://twitter.com/EdwardTufte/status/376420576555851778.
External links
- Tufte, Edward Rolf, Website, http://www.edwardtufte.com/.
- "The Data Artist", Salon, 1997-03-10, http://www.salon.com/1997/03/10/tufte970310/.
- Tufte, Edward Rolf (2007), "Intelligent Designs", Magazine (Stanford University's Alumni), http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2007/marapr/features/tufte.html, retrieved 2007-03-27.
- Pen and Parchment – The Beautiful Evidence of Medieval Drawings, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfXSltlDfDw, 47 min.
- Robison, Wade; Boisjoly, Roger; Hoeker, David; Young, Stefan (2002), "Representation and Misrepresentation: Tufte and the Morton Thiokol Engineers on the Challenger", Science and Engineering Ethics (Online Ethics Center for Engineering) 8 (1): 59–81, doi:10.1007/s11948-002-0033-2, PMID 11840958, http://www.onlineethics.org/CMS/profpractice/exempindex/RB-intro/RepMisrep.aspx, retrieved 2013-04-17 sharply criticizes Tufte's analysis of pre-disaster non-employment of graphics in Visual Explanations. Robison was a Rochester Institute of Technology professor; Boisjoly a directly involved Thiokol engineer; Hoeker and Young freshman RIT students. Alternative link.
- Ivy League Rock and Roll – A day with Edward Tufte, http://blog.bissantz.com/a-day-with-tufte, retrieved 2007-04-07.
- Art Directors Club, http://www.adcglobal.org/archive/hof/2004/?id=306.
- Edward Tufte's 'Beautiful Evidence', Yuri web, http://www.yuriweb.com/tufte/.
- "Portrait of the artist", News (United Kingdom: The BBC), https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-16976145.
- Tufte, Edward Rolf (2011-06-29), "How the government conveys information", The Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/edward-tufte-on-how-the-government-conveys-information/2011/06/29/AGB5OhqH_video.html.
Awards | ||
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Preceded by John Chapline |
ACM SIGDOC Rigo Award 1992 |
Succeeded by Jay Bolter |
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward Tufte.
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