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This repository involves the slides of the talk titled "Revisiting Historical Bar Graphics on Epidemics in the Era of R Ggplot2" at JSM2021.

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It's JSM time!.. 🎉🎉🎉

The slides of my talk at JSM 2021 is available at https://gulinan.github.io/jsm2021talk/

Abstract at JSM 2021:

This study is motivated by a government report published in 1938 which provides official statistics on multiple epidemics such as smallpox, trachoma, and malaria occurred between the years 1923 and 1937 in Turkey. The report uses black and white print column bar graphics, which were drawn by hand, to summarize the official statistics especially on workload of hospitals and then on vaccine administration in the country for informing the society with a low literacy skill during that period. From the lenses of a statistician, we found that information on these column graphics, which are in a form of grouped, side-by-side, or paired, is perceptively and aesthetically designed. In this study, we investigated how graphical elements of these historical graphics such as fill-in colors, data values, titles, axis lines, axis tick marks, tick mark labels, and legend colors are designed and whether it is possible to reproduce the identical of them in a digital platform in our era via R ggplot2. Our study revealed that R ggplot2, with the help of rich layering features such as scale_*() and annotate(), is very successful to mimic these historical graphics.

Key words: Black and white print; data literacy; historical data visualization; infectious diseases; information design; official public health statistics

p.s. A more comphrensive version of this study is published as an undergraduate thesis of Sami Aldag and Dogukan Topcuoglu who are the first two-authors. If you would like to cite this work, please let us know it via sending an email to me at [email protected].

Full version of the study is published in R Journal: https://journal.r-project.org/articles/RJ-2022-010/.

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This repository involves the slides of the talk titled "Revisiting Historical Bar Graphics on Epidemics in the Era of R Ggplot2" at JSM2021.

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