On the Use of ‘Glyphmaps’ for Analysing the Scale and Temporal Spread of COVID-19 Reported Cases

covid-19
multivariate visualization
glyphs
graphical inference

Roger Beecham, Jason Dykes, Layik Hama, Nik Lomax (2021) “On the Use of ‘Glyphmaps’ for Analysing the Scale and Temporal Spread of COVID-19 Reported Cases”, International Journal of Geo-Infomation, doi: 10.3390/ijgi10040213

Authors
Affiliations

School of Geography, University of Leeds

Department of Computing, City University of London

School of Geography, University of Leeds

School of Geography, University of Leeds

Published

January 2021

Doi

Abstract

Recent analysis of area-level COVID-19 cases data attempts to grapple with a challenge familiar to geovisualization: how to capture the development of the virus, whilst supporting analysis across geographic areas? We present several glyphmap designs for addressing this challenge applied to local authority data in England whereby charts displaying multiple aspects related to the pandemic are given a geographic arrangement. These graphics are visually complex, with clutter, occlusion and salience bias an inevitable consequence. We develop a framework for describing and validating the graphics against data and design requirements. Together with an observational data analysis, this framework is used to evaluate our designs, relating them to particular data analysis needs based on the usefulness of the structure they expose. Our designs, documented in an accompanying code repository, attend to common difficulties in geovisualization design and could transfer to contexts outside of the UK and to phenomena beyond the pandemic.

Important figure

Figure 10: Full glyphmap with area-chart of daily new cases (with 7-day smoothing) and spine plot of absolute and relative cases superimposed.

BibTeX citation

@article{beecham_on_2021,
    article-number = {213},
    author = {Beecham, R. and Dykes, J. and Hama, L. and Lomax, N.},
    doi = {10.3390/ijgi10040213},
    issn = {2220-9964},
    journal = {ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information},
    number = {4},
    title = {On the Use of `Glyphmaps' for Analysing the Scale and Temporal Spread of COVID-19 Reported Cases},
    volume = {10},
    year = {2021}
    }