Belief at first sight: Data visualization and the rationalization of seeing

Doris Kosminsky, Jagoda Walny, Jo Vermeulen, Søren Knudsen, Wesley Willett, and Sheelagh Carpendale

Abstract

Data visualizations are often represented in public discourse as objective proof of facts. However, a visualization is only a single translation of reality, just like any other media, representation devices, or modes of representation. If we wish to encourage thoughtful, informed, and literate consumption of data visualizations, it is crucial that we consider why they are often presented and interpreted as objective. We reflect theoretically on data visualization as a system of representation historically anchored in science, rationalism, and notions of objectivity. It establishes itself within a lineage of conventions for visual representations which extends from the Renaissance to the present and includes perspective drawing, photography, cinema and television, as well as computer graphics. By examining our tendency to see credibility in data visualizations and grounding that predisposition in a historical context, we hope to encourage more critical and nuanced production and interpretation of data visualizations in the public discourse.

Cite as
  1. Kosminsky, Doris, Jagoda Walny, Jo Vermeulen, Søren Knudsen, Wesley Willett, and Sheelagh Carpendale. "Belief at first sight: Data visualization and the rationalization of seeing." Information Design Journal 25, no. 1 (2019): 43–55
Bibtex
@article{kosminsky2019belief,
  title = {Belief at first sight: Data visualization and the rationalization of seeing},
  author = {Kosminsky, Doris and Walny, Jagoda and Vermeulen, Jo and Knudsen, S{\o}ren and Willett, Wesley and Carpendale, Sheelagh},
  journal = {Information Design Journal},
  volume = {25},
  number = {1},
  pages = {43--55},
  year = {2019},
  publisher = {John Benjamins},
  doi = {10.1075/idj.25.1.04kos}
}