The book breaks down the visualization process into several critical stages:
In Data Points: Visualization That Means Something , Nathan Yau argues that data visualization isn't just about aesthetics or technical proficiency—it’s about . While his previous work focused on the "how-to" (tools and code), this book dives into the "why," treating data as a medium for storytelling rather than just a collection of numbers. 1. Data as a Human Element Data Points: Visualization That Means Something
Yau’s central premise is that every data point represents a real-world event: a person’s heartbeat, a purchase, or a change in the environment. To create visualization that "means something," a designer must look past the spreadsheet and visualize the life behind the statistics. The book breaks down the visualization process into
Moving beyond bar charts to find the shapes, trends, and outliers that reveal the true narrative. Data as a Human Element Yau’s central premise
Getting to know the nuances, flaws, and origins of your dataset.