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Gallery: Bubble chart + Table

2 unique examples
Showing visual types:Bubble chart Icon for removing this tag Icon for this tag's benefits and pitfalls Icon for how to create this kind of visualisationTable Icon for removing this tag Icon for how to create this kind of visualisation

Benefits & pitfalls

Benefits & pitfalls: bubble chart

  • Using area or volume to represent data can distort data values, and exaggerate differences between values. For example, if the radius of the circle is used to represent data values, the area of the circle will quadruple if the data values double. There is also an issue of 'perceptual scaling' - the tendency of people to underestimate areas.

How to create your own

Create your own: bubble chart

  • Bubble charts can be created in a range of standard data applications such as Excel.

Create your own: table

  • Tables can be created in a range of standard data applications such as Excel.

Olympic medals result

Screenshot for 'Olympic medals result'
This infographic presents the final medal count for the 2008 Beijing Olympics in several dimensions. The central part shows the distribution of medals by continent using proportional bubbles to reflect the count. The inner circles of these bubbles are pie charts split by the type of medal. The same technique is applied in the other dimensions presented: medals by geopolitical groups (China, EU, ex soviet republics) , by sport (swimming, athletics, gymnastics) , by GDP and by population. It also contains full information of the final medal count by country and a day-by-day gold medal count (annotated bar char in the lower half). All parts of the visualisation are commented to give an overall picture of the event.
Average rating: 5.3 (3 votes)

Circular proportional area chart

Screenshot for 'Circular proportional area chart'
Comparison of peak sales and 2008 sales for various G.M. brands.
Unrated
Visual types:

bubble chart, table