Data Is Beautiful

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New York Times managed this with eloquence.

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Total energy production sources and consumption by state
https://www.eia.gov/beta/states/overview
@dataisbeautiful

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Using Zipf's Law to detect outliers in median age of European Countries in #LabPlot (2023 est.)

@dataisbeautiful

LabPlot ❤️ Data

➡️ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf%27s_law

#DataAnalysis #DataScience #Data #DataViz #Visualization #Plotting #Statistics #Age #Europe #FOSS #OpenSource

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Crul@lemm.ee to c/dataisbeautiful@lemmy.ml
 
 

Source:

Another chart from Kyoto Aquarium

Source:

Seen on: Spoon & Tamago

Penguins, the way they waddle around and protect their eggs, are often thought of as cute, cuddly and romantic. But those who observe them for extended periods know they have a dark side. Two aquariums in Japan, Kyoto Aquarium and Sumida Aquarium, keep obsessive tabs on their penguins and maintain an updated flowchart that visualizes all their penguin drama.

Penguins are highly social species. They like being with others and, like humans, this can often lead to polyamorous and sometimes scandalous situations. Penguin drama can include serious crushes and heartbreaks but also adultery and egg-stealing. Penguins may even develop crushes on their caretakers. And these Japanese aquariums have it all charted in a flowchart that can be studied for hours.

EDIT: Thanks to @flora_explora@beehaw.org for pointing out the english versions.

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Source (in Finnish).

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Wine and Cheese Map (www.wineandcheesemap.com)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by similideano@sopuli.xyz to c/dataisbeautiful@lemmy.ml
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"Are Republicans and Conservatives More Likely to Believe Conspiracy Theories?"

Enders, A., Farhart, C., Miller, J. et al. Are Republicans and Conservatives More Likely to Believe Conspiracy Theories?. Polit Behav (2022).

Abstract

A sizable literature tracing back to Richard Hofstadter’s The Paranoid Style (1964) argues that Republicans and conservatives are more likely to believe conspiracy theories than Democrats and liberals. However, the evidence for this proposition is mixed. Since conspiracy theory beliefs are associated with dangerous orientations and behaviors, it is imperative that social scientists better understand the connection between conspiracy theories and political orientations. Employing 20 surveys of Americans from 2012 to 2021 (total n = 37,776), as well as surveys of 20 additional countries spanning six continents (total n = 26,416), we undertake an expansive investigation of the asymmetry thesis. First, we examine the relationship between beliefs in 52 conspiracy theories and both partisanship and ideology in the U.S.; this analysis is buttressed by an examination of beliefs in 11 conspiracy theories across 20 more countries. In our second test, we hold constant the content of the conspiracy theories investigated—manipulating only the partisanship of the theorized villains—to decipher whether those on the left or right are more likely to accuse political out-groups of conspiring. Finally, we inspect correlations between political orientations and the general predisposition to believe in conspiracy theories over the span of a decade. In no instance do we observe systematic evidence of a political asymmetry. Instead, the strength and direction of the relationship between political orientations and conspiricism is dependent on the characteristics of the specific conspiracy beliefs employed by researchers and the socio-political context in which those ideas are considered.

https://rdcu.be/dnPTM

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