James Scott-Brown

@jamesscottbrown

Software Engineer at . Previously D.Phil student in Synthetic Biology and , then RA in Visualization at .

Vrijeme pridruživanja: travanj 2009.

Medijski sadržaj

  1. 19. sij
    Odgovor korisniku/ci

    From Gaither's Dictionary of Scientific Quotations:

  2. 18. sij

    Randomising the order of the items hides a lot of structure that could be seen if items belonging to the same combination of sets were positioned contiguously:

  3. Odgovor korisnicima

    This is very nice. As a refinement, have you considered using a small diagram in place of the color legend - e.g., something like this?

  4. Odgovor korisnicima

    An alternative would be to further simplify by not labelling points, and instead using shape to represent the 5 categories used in Table 1, like this (but without the contours etc.): Someone interested in the Nic_tot/alpha_fb of a specific product can look it up in Table 1.

  5. Odgovor korisniku/ci

    The fact that this tool only shows a single option at a time make it frustrating to use. A summary table would make it much easier to understand the comparison:

  6. Odgovor korisniku/ci

    As I scrolled passed your tweet, this kitten walked across my keyboard and almost blocked you:

  7. Odgovor korisniku/ci

    This idea reminds me of 's map showing highways restricting the movement of mountain lions in Southern California (image via )

  8. 3. stu 2019.
    Odgovor korisnicima

    A couple of structures seem to be drawn wrong (e.g., DrugBank IDs DB02626 and DB03574)

  9. 5. lis 2019.
    Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:

    You seem to have linked to the wrong paper:

  10. Odgovor korisnicima

    Using colors that can be distinguished by people with a colour vision deficiency is always a good idea, but this is not the only problem here. The monochrome version is easily understood if lines are labeled directly (which also helps those who can see the colors fine).

  11. Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:

    I suspect that some of these suggestsions from "Making Maps: A Visual Guide to Map Design for GIS" might also be interesting to you, but I haven't yet read any of them.

  12. Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:
  13. Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:

    Thanks for pointing out the duplication - I've just removed 3 repeats. There should be a Networks keyword:

  14. 3. kol 2019.
    Odgovor korisniku/ci
  15. Odgovor korisniku/ci

    Since neither arc thickness nor color encode any information I don't see the advantage of this representation vs a table. It makes the reader trace overlapping lines, so it is harder to spot, for example, that there is one class (Lipopeptides) affected by alt. target & not efflux

  16. Odgovor korisnicima

    This is a nice approach. The video is very helpful in conveying the idea:

  17. Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:

    I think I've found a bug: moivng the leftmost control sometimes resizes the left-context (b1), which I would expect, but sometimes it resizes the rightmost context instead.

  18. Odgovor korisnicima i sljedećem broju korisnika:

    The shaded area is a nice addition, but why use bars for the women's ages rather than encoding everyone's age the same?

  19. Odgovor korisniku/ci

    This looks great viewed on the Digital Observatory at the

  20. Odgovor korisniku/ci

    Hilary Preistley’s introduction to complex analysis has diagrams like these:

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