Congratulations to the winners of the 2012 Visualizing Research@Tufts Awards Program! The winning entries can be found at: http://sites.tufts.edu/vrta/2012-winners/
Visualization is an important research tool that puts data into a spatial context to effectively communicate information and create a visceral, emotional connection to the results. Visualization has been used to help understand data, processes, structures, and concepts in fields ranging from engineering to humanities and from health sciences to social sciences. The most widespread forms of visualization are graphs, pie charts, work flows, illustrations, photographs and animations.
Well-designed visualizations are powerful communication tools that support recall, inference, and decision-making. In one of the most famous works of graphic visualization, Napoleon’s March, Charles Minard, a French civil engineer, visually described the losses suffered by Napoleon’s army in the Russian campaign of 1812.
If you’re interested to see how Tufts students and faculty use visualization to describe their research, you may attend the awards ceremony where the entries will be on display.
What: Visualizing Research@Tufts Awards
When: 3-5 pm, Thursday, April 12
Where: Alumnae Lounge, Medford Campus
The awards ceremony will run from 3:15 to 4 pm. Following the awards ceremony, the entries will be on display.