A COVID-19 graphing tool for world countries, US states, and US counties. Includes basic TA tools.
Quantitative analysis of the types and frequency of graphs used in COVID-19 news stories and qualitative analysis of the content of news stories containing graphs were conducted. Second, we identified cases in which readers may be biased by the mathematical misuse of graphs in the news stories ...
In these days and months of COVID-19, we wonder about risk. When I go out in public, what is my risk? The answer in part depends on prevalence: How many people in my area are infectious? In the United States, we don’t have an adequate testing program, and we don’t know how ...
The radial bar plot shows top 50 countries of confirmed cases of COVID-19. Radial bars or stacked radial bars are also known as Nightingale Rose Chart, or Coxcomb Chart. It is to show data in circular bars. Polar vector plot of wind speed The compass plot displays wind speed every da...
COVID-19. Earlier this week,opens in new tabAlicia Frame– the Lead Product Manager for Data Science at Neo4j – was interviewed byopens in new tabKaren Robyat TechRepublic on how Neo4j is being used for drug discovery and other pharmaceutical research in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic...
COVID-19, caused by SARS-CoV-2, has rapidly spread to most of the countries in the past year. As of 11 AM CEST, 8 September 2022, world-wide confirmed cases of COVID-19 has reached 603,711,760, among which 6,484,136 patients died1. It has been overwhelming the medical systems of...
Data is the lifeblood of modern enterprises, fueling everything from innovation to strategic decision making. However, as organizations amass ever-growing…
Instead, they should have compared the number of cases to the population of the country, city or state. This would have made comparing the different locations a lot easier. It also would have made the chart actually useful. For example, if Kansas City and Los Angeles had the exact same nu...
whether it’s the number of COVID cases, electricity prices or inflation rates, to try to work out what’s coming next. What our research shows is that our predictions of what we think will happen next are affected not just by the trends we’re looking at but the format in which they...
A conference sponsored by Columbia University, turned virtual because of COVID-19, brought together practitioners of knowledge graphs, hoping to get a handle on the order that lies beneath the chaos of the world.