Atlas of Science: Visualizing What We Know (Mit Press)
B**O
This detailed, richly illustrated Atlas is the first of its kind
Katy Borner's Atlas of Science is a large format, richly illustrated book introducing satellite views of science from above. With the importance of data visualization as a reflection and new visual language for contemporary culture, having a better sense of this similar but entirely new genre of Science Maps based on 'big data' is critical. Borner's book goes far beyond beauty by being the first Atlas of its kind. A highlight of the book is the "Milestones in Mapping Science" timeline covering 1930 to 2007 in 20 pages. The process, techniques and reference systems used in creating these highly refined maps are also described in great detail. So the book acts as a superb, highly visual introduction to the field for students, professionals and the general public. Another highlight: readers can access much of the material online in a companion site. High resolution images, all references, the history of the atlas, and events are all linked from [...] - Enjoy!
M**Y
Liked book but it was a tiny bit damaged
Got this as a birthday present, so I did not have time to return it when I noticed that the cover of the book was a bit damaged--it looked as though the book had sat on a bar with weight atop it, which left an indentation in one side of the hard-board cover. It was not a big enough flaw that I felt I had to return it, especially since I did not have time. The illustrations and content of the book are great, especially for those interested in the visual representation of scientific information.
P**R
Very good value, but...
Wonderful graphics. It is, however, worth pondering why, in this age of big data and social network theory, there is only one that really tries to capture the causal intersection of different processes -- and that is Minard's classic 1869 diagram of the advance and retreat of Napoleon's army!
D**H
a science happy meal
The ATLAS OF SCIENCE is brain food. It is like a giant science buffet...For anyone interested in mind bending conceptual formulations of what we know,where we can be, how we got here, who's going with us, it is a lip smacking delight.I'm pacing myself for another run through the buffet line.
C**O
but I like the main maps on science information better
a lot information about structure, but I like the main maps on science information better, they are very small
C**X
Beautiful
Great for all ages. I got this to help get children interested in science with the great pictures. But now I don't want their dirty little hands touching it! LOL
J**K
Nerds Gone Wild!
"Atlas of Science: Visualizing What We Know" by Katy Borner, MIT Press, 2010.Anyone with less than a bachelors degree, and probably only then with a science major, will open this colorfully illustrated coffetable-book and go "Huh?" Those with the prerequisite knowledge to understand the extensive graphics will be fascinated. Unfortunately, this mix of science and history is contaminated with science futurism; there are parts that more correctly should be filed by librarians under science fiction.The most enjoyable sections are the biographical snippets that explain how various (mostly computer pioneer) luminaries contributed to various stages in the analysis of scientific advancement. However, the perspective of the book is through the new digital generation and lacks the expertise of veteran scientists who would have rightly dampened the futurist gloss. For instance, in tracing the history of maps, it begins with the ptolemaic system rather than earlier T-O maps that were "oriented" with East at the top, hence the meaning of the term "to orient a map."One recurring pioneer thinker is Eugene Garfield, familiar to earlier users of "Current Contents." He was inventor of the science citation index that rates a publication's value on the number of times it is then cited. Modifications of this procedure have been used for substantial portions of graphic analyses. This may be useful for molecular biology or cancer research where each new discovery immediately triggers the next step. But in systematics, a monographic revision of a group should "quiet" the field for some time; if it is immediately followed by extensive citations, that would nearly always indicate that the revision was erroneous and generated extensive objections. In other words, there are quality factors that in many graphs are totally ignored for quantity measures. Therefore, those who promote this technology without any understanding of its appropriate and inappropriate uses promote concepts that are not only pollyanna but downright destructive. Thus this atlas is schizophrenic.One clear case is represented in the "Science Maps for Kids" section where a narrow selection of computer games are hyped as the wave of the future, ignoring massive evidence of videogame addiction that has decimated male participation in academics across all developed countries for the last 15 years.Ironically, Garfield once interviewed Linus Pauling and asked how Pauling came up with his discoveries in biochemistry. Pauling revealed that it took extensive experience and time to think; a process that is not aided in any way by "science methods" or analyses such as are in this book. In other words, this book is analogous to baseball statistics, fabulously interesting to the baseball fan but of limited or no value to the rookie training for the game. Yes, the graphics showing that the more an author is cited, the more grants and prestige flow to them ("knowledge equals power") are a true reflection of the politics of science, but it is worrisome that decision makers have already mis-used such data for decades.Another major error that continually reoccurs is the confusion of "information" with "knowledge" as if they were the same. "The enormous increase in our collective knowledge..." is but one of many examples. Until the Rosetta Stone was discovered, the hieroglyphs were information, but we did not "know" what they meant. The accumulation of information into the "world brain" and other "knowledge webs" shows a complete lack of understanding of the role of education. Essentially, "no experience, no meaning."While various "mapping science workshops" from 2005 to 2007 brought bonafide expertise together to produce valid big science "visualizations," the most serious and obvious pseudoscience is seen in heavy reference to Wikipedia, where group wisdom and science often do not come together. Not only is the science quality of Wikipedia never questioned, the Wikipedia methodology is held as a wonderful example of future compendia; in truth it is the replacement of expert review with amateurism. This blindness throughout the narrative, as well as the future-hype, seriously detracts from the sections of graphics that are valid and useful.Throughout this tome, there is an underlying theme that the future will be completely online, open source and digital (whatever that means). The ultimate irony is that this book, while accessible through a website with extended hyperlinks to everywhere, is in print, and it is in this format that it is most easily read and deeply understood.John Richard Schrock
E**S
data are beautiful
This is reviewed at:[...]Worthwhile for anyone interested in how to present data - not just making it "look pretty", but making it visually meaningful.
B**R
アメリカでは基礎科学の研究の幅が広く深い
流石にアメリカの学術界をあげての「科学の地図」を描いた1冊。編者は図書館情報学のドイツ系女性教員だがが、編者は電気工学をライプチヒ大学で修めている。その後アメリカで図書館情報学を修めている。アメリカでは基礎科学の研究の幅が広く深いので、本書のような研究プロジェクトが多数あり、科学の普及に貢献している。研究基金は、NSFとNIHが中心になって、3年がかりで進み、本書のオンライン版もある(検索してアクセスされたい)。本書でも興味深いのは、未来の科学の地図が最終5章に設定されている。完成は2014年の予定のようで、今後がさらに楽しみ。 本書は既存の人類が産み出した科学知識、科学そのものを地図(map)に描き出そうとした壮大な企画で、2万年前の人類の誕生から現代までを、3次元+時間軸でプロットし、様々な観点から、宇宙、地球、脳の地図に描き出す試み。 基礎になっているのは引用索引データなど科学情報の可視化を行う手法が活かされている。科学の地図だけあって、基礎となる情報は精緻で、ここまで様々な情報が活用できることアメリカの研究体制の奥深さを知らしめる1冊。日本には無理であり、その成果が1冊の大きな絵本として、さらにはHPとして公開されていることが素晴らしい。日本人研究者の成果も反映している。実に割安な活きる科学誌の著作。現時点で2188円ですが、日本で作れば6千円では収まらないであろう。買って損はないどころから、瞠目の1冊であることを保証する。研究者にも有効だが、教育者や学生が利用することで本書の意図と目的はより精彩を帯びよう。 次作は現在進行中のプロジェクトの成果として、Atlas of Knowledgeの刊行が2014年に予告されている。これは知全体を対象にしており、人文社会科学を視野に入れた全体であり、大いに期待する。
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