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Our February event will feature Dr. Lace Padilla speaking about visualizing uncertainty in your data.

We live in an uncertain world. From extreme weather events to pandemic forecasts, every day, we are confronted with uncertainty. Unfortunately, uncertainty is highly challenging for both the general public and trained experts to understand, which is why effectively conveying uncertainty in scientific findings is critical. Visualizations afford thinking with such complex data, as they capitalize on the visual system's highly advanced pattern recognition system to process vast data sets at once. This efficient processing is in stark contrast to the limitations of sequential reading required by sets of symbolic numbers. This talk will discuss state-of-the-art uncertainty visualization techniques and the cognitive processes that can lead to misunderstandings of data with uncertainty. We will discuss best practices in information visualization to support researchers' awareness of how visualization choices influence their audience's understanding of data, supporting informed and ethical decisions about conveying statistical results.

Hosted by the New York DataViz Meetup Group, this virtual event is being shared with multiple DataViz Meetup groups across the country.

YOU MUST REGISTER TO GET THE LINK!
Step 1 - RSVP here on Meetup to see the Online Event link.
Step 2 - Click the Online Event link to get to the Zoom Registration page.
(Don't believe the Meetup popup that says "Join the Event" when you click the link. You're just clicking the registration link.)

Do it now... you're not fully registered for the event until you've completed both steps. Zoom will send you the link to connect to the event.

NOTE: To join the event you must have a registered Zoom account. If you don't have one, you can create one for free at https://zoom.us

SCHEDULE: (Central time)
5:00 - Group Announcements
5:15 - Visualizing Our Uncertain World, Dr. Lace Padilla
6:00 - Q&A

SPEAKER: Dr. Lace Padilla is an Assistant Professor in the Cognitive and Information Sciences Department at the University of California Merced and was an NSF Postdoctoral Scholar at Northwestern University. Padilla and collaborators have received multiple grants from NSF and DOE to study uncertainty communication in the context of COVID-19, wildfire risk, and energy grids. In her spare time, she is a strong advocate for minoritized groups in STEM, served on the Governing Board of Spark Society and the IEEE VIS Inclusivity Committee.

Presentations
Data Visualization
Cognitive Science
Information Visualization
Visual Communication

Sponsors

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InfoNewt
InfoNewt pays for the Meetup and Zoom costs
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InfoNewt
Pays the Meetup.com dues and Organizes events and speakers.
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Capital Factory + The DEC
Thank you to Capital Factory for sponsoring event space in 2020!

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