visual data
88
learning, conceptualizing + communicating data with infographics, visualizations, etc...
Curated by Lauren Moss
Follow
Scooped by Lauren Moss onto visual data
Scoop.it!

New research & maps provide a detailed look at how the brain organizes visual information

New research & maps provide a detailed look at how the brain organizes visual information | visual data | Scoop.it
How does our brain organize the visual information that our eyes capture? Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, used computational models of brain imaging data to answer this question and arrived at what they call “continuous semantic space” – a notion which serves as the basis for the first interactive maps showing how the brain categorizes what we see.The data on which the maps are based was collected while the subjects watched movie clips. Brain activity was recorded via functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), a type of MRI that measures brain activity by detecting related changes in blood flow. In order to find the correlations in the data collected, the researchers used a type of analysis known as regularized linear regression...
Pedro Barbosa's curator insight, December 28, 2012 7:53 AM

Excellent articple about neuroscience - visual mapping.

Understanding our minds is important on all types of management tasks;)

 

Pedro Barbosa | www.pbarbosa.com | www.harvardtrends.com

Beth Kanter's curator insight, December 30, 2012 4:10 PM

Good points to make about why going visual is important

Lauren Moss is also curating
sustainable architecture green infographics green streets visualizing social media innovative design
Discover Topics Lauren Moss is following
The 21st Century Geography Education Content Curation World Digital Presentations in Education MarketingHits Transmedia: Storytelling for the Digital Age
and 53 others
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Lauren Moss
Scoop.it!

Open Data Emerges as a Global Movement

Open Data Emerges as a Global Movement | visual data | Scoop.it

“Open data” — the philosophy and practice of making the data collected by government agencies freely available to the public — is critical to increasing citizens’ engagement with their governments. Since 2010, hundreds of nations, regions, and cities across the world have launched their own open data initiatives.

For example, datacatalogs.org maintains centralized lists of local, regional, and national data catalogs. Europe is heavily represented: nearly every country publishes open data, geospatial files and maps and statistics. Within each nation, local councils, regional governments, and autonomous regions are publishing their own locally-relevant open data. Spain, Italy, and France each boast over a dozen internal data catalogs created by local agencies...

Whether or not open data portals eventually lead to open, transparent, and accountable democratic governments is still up for debate, but they remain indispensable to the citizens, researchers, and journalists using data from these sites.


Read the complete post for a better understanding of open data in a concise, yet informative article with numerous links and specific initiatives referenced for further research...

Johnson Watts's comment, October 2, 2012 1:35 PM
It's not the size of government that counts. It's the transparency, agility, and democracy of goverment that matters.