Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 37, Issue 1 , Pages 75-87, January 2001

Achieving graphical excellence: Suggestions and methods for creating high-quality visual displays of experimental data☆☆

University of California–Los Angeles Emergency Medicine Center, University of California–Los Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA.

Received 15 December 1999; received in revised form 13 June 2000 and 26 July 2000; accepted 14 August 2000.

Abstract 

Graphics are an important means of communicating experimental data and results. There is evidence, however, that many of the graphics printed in scientific journals contain errors, redundancies, and lack clarity. Perhaps more important, many graphics fail to portray data at an appropriate level of detail, presenting summary statistics rather than underlying distributions. We seek to aid investigators in the production of high-quality graphics that do their investigations justice by providing the reader with optimum access to the relevant aspects of the data. The depiction of by-subject data, the signification of pairing when present, and the use of symbolic dimensionality (graphing different symbols to identify relevant subgroups) and small multiples (the presentation of an array of similar graphics each depicting one group of subjects) to portray stratification are stressed. Step-by-step instructions for the construction of high-quality graphics are offered. We hope that authors will incorporate these suggestions when developing graphics to accompany their manuscripts and that this process will lead to improvements in the graphical literacy of scientific journals. We also hope that journal editors will keep these principles in mind when refereeing manuscripts submitted for peer review. [Schriger DL, Cooper RJ. Achieving graphical excellence: suggestions and methods for creating high-quality visual displays of experimental data. Ann Emerg Med. January 2001;37:75-87.]

 

 Dr. Schriger is supported in part by an unrestricted gift to support health services research from the MedAmerica Corporation.

☆☆ Dr. Cooper is supported in part by National Research Service Award No. F32 HS00134-01 from the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research.

 Reprints not available from the authors. Address for correspondence: David L. Schriger, MD, MPH, 924 Westwood Boulevard, Suite 300, Los Angeles, CA 90024; 310-794-0583, fax 310-794-0599; E-mail schriger@ucla.edu.

PII: S0196-0644(01)75063-9

doi:10.1067/mem.2001.111570

Refers to article:

  • An evaluation of the graphical literacy of Annals of Emergency Medicine

    Richelle J. Cooper, David L. Schriger, David A. Tashman
    Annals of Emergency Medicine January 2001 (Vol. 37, Issue 1, Pages 13-19)

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 37, Issue 1 , Pages 75-87, January 2001