using data in science journalism

37
STEVE DOIG CRONKITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Using data in science journalism

Upload: ginata

Post on 22-Feb-2016

61 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Using data in science journalism. Steve Doig Cronkite school of Journalism Arizona State University. Precision journalism. “The plural of anecdote is not evidence.” Pioneers: Cronkite, Herald and Inquirer - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Using data in  science journalism

STEVE DOIGCRONKITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY

Using data in science journalism

Page 2: Using data in  science journalism

Precision journalism

“The plural of anecdote is not evidence.”Pioneers: Cronkite, Herald and InquirerPhil Meyer wrote the book in 1972 calling for

journalists to use social science methodsSome journalists began doing computer-

assisted reporting in the early 1980sNICAR created in early 1990sToday thousands of reporters doing precision

journalism

Page 3: Using data in  science journalism

Data-driven stories

Sociology: “Color of Money”, censusWeather disaster: “What Went Wrong”,

KatrinaEnvironment: “Boss Hog”, “Toxic Waters”, FL

wetlands, “Ghost Factories”, “Smokestack Effect”,

Medical: “Culture of Resistance”, radiation errors, Medicare fraud, “Playing with Fire”

Page 4: Using data in  science journalism

Technical Tools

Search (browser and Google)Spreadsheet (Excel)Database manager (Access, MySQL)Statistical software (SPSS, R)Programming (Python, SAS, perl, et al.)Mapping (ArcMap, QGIS, Tableau)Visualization (Fusion Tables, R, Stata, et al.)Exotica: GPS, satellite imagery, drones,

sensors

Page 5: Using data in  science journalism

Methods

Newsroom math: Percentage change, crowd counting, etc.

Descriptive statistics: Mean, median, rangeCorrelation and regressionUnderstanding p-values and confidence

intervalsIndexes:

Dissimilarity (measures segregation) Diversity (measures population mix) Benford’s Law (used in forensic accounting) HHI (measures market competitiveness)

Page 6: Using data in  science journalism
Page 7: Using data in  science journalism
Page 8: Using data in  science journalism
Page 9: Using data in  science journalism
Page 10: Using data in  science journalism
Page 11: Using data in  science journalism

Google Tricks

Site: , filetype:Define:6 dollars in euros, miles in 35 km3.14159*452345Weather bostonBoston moviesFedEx, UPS trackingFlight info

Page 12: Using data in  science journalism
Page 13: Using data in  science journalism
Page 14: Using data in  science journalism
Page 15: Using data in  science journalism
Page 16: Using data in  science journalism
Page 17: Using data in  science journalism
Page 18: Using data in  science journalism
Page 19: Using data in  science journalism
Page 20: Using data in  science journalism
Page 21: Using data in  science journalism
Page 22: Using data in  science journalism
Page 23: Using data in  science journalism
Page 24: Using data in  science journalism
Page 25: Using data in  science journalism
Page 26: Using data in  science journalism
Page 27: Using data in  science journalism
Page 28: Using data in  science journalism
Page 29: Using data in  science journalism
Page 30: Using data in  science journalism
Page 31: Using data in  science journalism

Science.gov

Page 32: Using data in  science journalism

Data.gov

Page 33: Using data in  science journalism

USGS.gov

Page 34: Using data in  science journalism

IRE.org data library

Page 35: Using data in  science journalism

Eurekalert.org

Page 36: Using data in  science journalism

Strategies

Which agency would have the data you want?Science data agencies: FDA, EPA, NSF, Census,

CDC, NRC, FAA, NTSB, NHTSA…Look for “data” linksScience societies and journals: AAAS, AMA, et al.Get on email lists of agencies and societies that

interest youJoin NASW (and IRE)Use search to find scholars working in your fieldMonitor e-journals like Arxiv.org

Page 37: Using data in  science journalism

TAKE A BREAK!

www.public.asu.edu/~sdoig/knight/