Data Journalism Top 10: Social Distancing Interactive, Epidemic Modeling, Germany’s Low Death Rate, and Zuckerburg TikTok Video

Print More

The coronavirus pandemic has sparked an array of interactives, charts, and simulations by data journalists and citizens around the world. This week’s NodeXL #ddj mapping from March 23 to 29 finds The New York Times warning of the dangers of ending social distancing measures by Easter, Germany’s Der Spiegel and Der Tagesspiegel measuring traffic levels and COVID-19 cases respectively, the Tampa Bay Times monitoring Florida’s growing peril, Kevin Simler making an interactive simulation to explain how general epidemics unfold, and Mona Chalabi creating a viral TikTok video on Mark Zuckerberg’s donation to advance coronavirus research.

Dangers of Ending Social Distancing

US President Donald Trump alarmed health experts by saying he hoped to end social distancing measures by Easter. The New York Times developed an interactive model with epidemiologists to show why returning to normal routines too quickly could lead to an explosion of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths. The Times is also attempting to track every coronavirus case in the country, and released its dataset of coronavirus cases to the public. Looking for more COVID-19 datasets? Try Google’s Dataset Search.

German Traffic in the Time of Corona

Political leaders in Germany have not enacted curfews like many other nations, but they have imposed extensive nationwide exit restrictions and strict limits on social gatherings. Der Spiegel analyzed data from Hystreet’s laser scanners, the TomTom Traffic Index, and Eco Counter to measure pedestrian, vehicle, and bicycle traffic.

Florida’s Worrying Progression

As of March 31, Florida remained one of the few US states with a large outbreak without a statewide order keeping residents at home. According to a Tampa Bay Times analysis, the rate of increase in the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the state puts it on a trajectory to see tens of thousands of infections in coming weeks. Experts say the number of cases is already past the point of easy containment.

How Epidemics Unfold

Kevin Simler, co-author of “The Elephant in the Brain: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life,” tried his hand at creating an interactive simulation of a disease outbreak. His caveat: The grid simulations are not an attempt to model COVID-19, but a simplified model of how general epidemics unfold.

Tracking Coronavirus Cases in Germany

Der Tagesspiegel is tracking all confirmed coronavirus infections in Germany by county and state. It notes that large cities are particularly affected, probably due to their population density.

Why Germany’s COVID-19 Death Rate Is Low

Sky News published a piece on March 26 comparing the fatality rates of coronavirus cases in different countries. Although Germany had already logged more than 37,000 confirmed infections by then, its fatality rate stood out as the lowest figure among the most affected countries. The piece offers several reasons why: adequate and rigorous testing, fewer elderly infected, and a high number of acute care hospital beds available.

COVID-19 Lessons for Australia

Australia’s ABC News put together a piece to help readers understand how quickly coronavirus is spreading in different countries; where Australia fits into the global picture; and what Aussies can learn from countries that appear to have curbed the rise of COVID-19.

Zuckerberg’s Research Donation

Data journalist Mona Chalabi, who is known for her fun data illustrations and innovative ways of presenting data, created a video on TikTok that sparked a lot of discussion on wealth and charity. Using two cups and green liquid in the video, she showed what the proportion of Mark Zuckerberg’s $25 million donation for coronavirus research looks like in relation to his $81 billion fortune. Insider has the story here.

Pie Chart Fail

With the abundance of COVID-19 related graphics being churned out, it was inevitable that bad charts would be generated. In particular, an erroneous pie chart produced by WCVB is making the rounds on social media.

Make a Cartoon Sketch

This isn’t new, but just in case you missed it: Tim Qian, a full-stack JavaScript hacker and open source activist, created Chart.xkcd — a chart library that plots “sketchy,” “cartoony,” or “hand-drawn” styled charts. More details on Github.


Thanks again to Marc Smith of Connected Action for gathering the links and graphing them. The Top Ten #ddj list is curated weekly.

Eunice Au is GIJN’s program coordinator. Previously, she was a Malaysia correspondent for Singapore’s The Straits Times, and a journalist at the New Straits Times. She has also written for The Sun, Malaysian Today, and Madam Chair.

 

For a look at NodeXL’s mapping on #ddj and data journalism on Twitter, check out this map.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *