

Most of these tools are available through ITS. Other specialized data visualizations can be created through tools like MATLAB, and Mathematica.

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Other more specialized data visualization resources include ESRI’s Windows only ArcGIS Pro and ArcGIS Online, or the cross platform, open source QGIS tools for any mapping related data. Recently we’ve seen more and more folks taking advantage of the open source development and data visualization resources that are available as plug-ins through the R environment often through RStudio. We support a host of data analysis tools that also come with Data Visualization, such as JMP, Stata, SPSS, and R / RStudio. We’d like your help! Please complete this quick Google Form to tell us more about the data visualization tools you current use for teaching and research, and if there are any you’d like us to look into: Swarthmore Data Visualization Survey What’s currently availableĭata visualization tools currently available at Swarthmore include basic graphing tools such as Kaleidagraph, our general purpose solution for teaching data visualization, as well as tools like Microsoft Excel, which has some data plotting features. You need a data visualization tool! Whether you are teaching students best practices for displaying their data, or writing up and analyzing your own research results, choosing the data visualization tool that is best for you can be crucial to effective communication. Your research has generated some numbers for different cases you are analyzing, different conditions of your experiments, or some other way of differentiating groups, and you want to share that information in the most informative way possible with your colleagues, your lab group, or in a publication.
