All about Connecticut
Mar 08, 2023
This dataviz project by CT Mirror is excellent. The project walks through key statistics of the state of Connecticut.
Here are a few charts I enjoyed.
The first one shows the industries employing the most CT residents. The left and right arrows are perfect, much better than the usual dot plots.
The industries are sorted by decreasing size from top to bottom, based on employment in 2019. The chosen scale is absolute, showing the number of employees. The relative change is shown next to the arrow heads in percentages.
The inclusion of both absolute and relative scales may be a source of confusion as the lengths of the arrows encode the absolute differences, not the relative differences indicated by the data labels. This type of decision is always difficult for the designer. Selecting one of the two scales may improve clarity but induce loss aversion.
***
The next example is a bumps chart showing the growth in residents with at least a bachelor's degree.
This is more like a slopegraph as it appears to draw straight lines between two time points 9 years apart, omitting the intervening years. Each line represents a state. Connecticut's line is shown in red. The message is clear. Connecticut is among the most highly educated out of the 50 states. It maintained this advantage throughout the period.
I'd prefer to use solid lines for the background states, and the axis labels can be sparser.
It's a little odd that pretty much every line has the same slope. I'm suspecting that the numbers came out of a regression model, with varying slopes by state, but the inter-state variance is low.
In the online presentation, one can click on each line to see the values.
***
The final example is a two-sided bar chart:
This shows migration in and out of the state. The red bars represent the number of people who moved out, while the green bars represent those who moved into the state. The states are arranged from the most number of in-migrants to the least.
I have clipped the bottom of the chart as it extends to 50 states, and the bottom half is barely visible since the absolute numbers are so small.
I'd suggest showing the top 10 states. Then group the rest of the states by region, and plot them as regions. This change makes the chart more compact, as well as more useful.
***
There are many other charts, and I encourage you to visit and support this data journalism.
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.