talks
Data source:
https://csvconf.com/
1 row
where abstract = "Journalists don’t write for other journalists—they write for the curious and community-minded public. In the same way, statistical journalism should not be a black box of visualizations and narrative meant only for data makers like us. Crafting data-driven stories for a general audience means giving readers an opportunity to interact with a fun and practical use case while explaining the interpretative thinking that lies under the hood of statistical methods. I am an undergraduate at Cal Poly that writes and builds interactive, data-driven publishings with a team of students. I'll walk you through how we ideate fascinating questions, make methods explainable, and use Jupyter Notebooks to share reproducible code.", day = "May 9 2019" and url = "https://csvconf.com/speakers/#marisa-aquilina" sorted by day
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- https://csvconf.com/speakers/#marisa-aquilina · 1 ✖
abstract
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- Journalists don’t write for other journalists—they write for the curious and community-minded public. In the same way, statistical journalism should not be a black box of visualizations and narrative meant only for data makers like us. Crafting data-driven stories for a general audience means giving readers an opportunity to interact with a fun and practical use case while explaining the interpretative thinking that lies under the hood of statistical methods. I am an undergraduate at Cal Poly that writes and builds interactive, data-driven publishings with a team of students. I'll walk you through how we ideate fascinating questions, make methods explainable, and use Jupyter Notebooks to share reproducible code. · 1 ✖
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Crafting Data-Driven Stories for the Everyday Reader |
Marisa Aquilina |
2:00 PM |
May 9 2019 |
Fuller Hall |
https://csvconf.com/speakers/#marisa-aquilina |
2019-05-09T14:00:00 |
Journalists don’t write for other journalists—they write for the curious and community-minded public. In the same way, statistical journalism should not be a black box of visualizations and narrative meant only for data makers like us. Crafting data-driven stories for a general audience means giving readers an opportunity to interact with a fun and practical use case while explaining the interpretative thinking that lies under the hood of statistical methods. I am an undergraduate at Cal Poly that writes and builds interactive, data-driven publishings with a team of students. I'll walk you through how we ideate fascinating questions, make methods explainable, and use Jupyter Notebooks to share reproducible code. |
https://csvconf.com/img/speakers-2019/maquilina.jpg |
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[abstract] TEXT,
[image] TEXT
)