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by ibrarmalik
2173 days ago
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The idea behind Chernoff faces (or using faces for data visualization) seems good: we humans are very good at distinguishing faces, so we can quickly find groups and outliers if the data is encoded with a face. But we have to be careful with this. Changing facial expressions is not the same as increasing the height of a barplot, we're relating features with expressions and the visualization might express things that you don't want. There is a very famous example for this in "Life in Los Angeles" (1977) by Eugene Turner [1]. Maybe you can infer the data well but in the end this just ends up being a map of angry black people. The choice of features and how to visualize them is clearly racist. [1] https://mapdesign.icaci.org/2014/12/mapcarte-353365-life-in-... |
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That map colored black people dark like their skin, and encoded misery as unhappy faces.
The result accurately showed happy white people and unhappy black people. How is it racist to acknowledge the racially biased distribution of suffering?