Cookies help us display personalized product recommendations and ensure you have great shopping experience.

By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
SmartData CollectiveSmartData Collective
  • Analytics
    AnalyticsShow More
    data analytics in ecommerce
    Analytics Technology Drives Conversions for Your eCommerce Site
    5 Min Read
    CRM Analytics
    CRM Analytics Helps Content Creators Develop an Edge in a Saturated Market
    5 Min Read
    data analytics and commerce media
    Leveraging Commerce Media & Data Analytics in Ecommerce
    8 Min Read
    big data in healthcare
    Leveraging Big Data and Analytics to Enhance Patient-Centered Care
    5 Min Read
    instagram visibility
    Data Analytics Plays a Key Role in Improving Instagram Visibility
    7 Min Read
  • Big Data
  • BI
  • Exclusive
  • IT
  • Marketing
  • Software
Search
© 2008-23 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Looking at Trees to Understand the Forest
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
SmartData CollectiveSmartData Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • About
  • Help
  • Privacy
Follow US
© 2008-23 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
SmartData Collective > Big Data > Data Visualization > Looking at Trees to Understand the Forest
Data VisualizationPredictive Analytics

Looking at Trees to Understand the Forest

JuiceAnalytics
JuiceAnalytics
6 Min Read
SHARE

David Simon (of The Wire fame) has sucked me into another brilliant television series with Generation Kill. It is the story of a Marine recon unit at the beginning of the Iraq war. At the heart of all the action, the seven-part miniseries offers an intimate and honest profiles of individual Marines.

The characters don’t so much displace stereotypes as reveal texture and insight about the unique qualities of individual Marines.

The series got me thinking once again about different ways to analyze data. Almost four years ago, I posted a couple blog posts (Part 1 and Part 2) making a case for analyzing and visualizing data at a granular level to uncover patterns and behaviors. Generation Kill is a case study in looking closely at the individual trees to understand the forest.

More Read

New Challenges for creating predictive analytic models

A reader asks – how to document decision logic
CBS’s Television City Redefines In-House/DIY Market Research
Challenges and Opportunities in Big Data From Industry and Academia Panel
SaaS Business Intelligence Solves the Data Silo Problem

Analytics is a journey of exploration–a continuous series of iterations with the goal of deeper understanding based on better questions and more targeted analyses. Einstein said:

“To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science.”

How to arrive at new questions?

In the previous …

David Simon (of The Wire fame) has sucked me into another brilliant television series with Generation Kill. It is the story of a Marine recon unit at the beginning of the Iraq war. At the heart of all the action, the seven-part miniseries offers an intimate and honest profiles of individual Marines.

The characters don’t so much displace stereotypes as reveal texture and insight about the unique qualities of individual Marines.

The series got me thinking once again about different ways to analyze data. Almost four years ago, I posted a couple blog posts (Part 1 and Part 2) making a case for analyzing and visualizing data at a granular level to uncover patterns and behaviors. Generation Kill is a case study in looking closely at the individual trees to understand the forest.

Analytics is a journey of exploration–a continuous series of iterations with the goal of deeper understanding based on better questions and more targeted analyses. Einstein said:

“To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science.”

How to arrive at new questions?

In the previous blog post, I described examples from online learning, credit cards usage, and football film study to show how granular analysis can spur new questions. I’ve stumbled across a series of new examples recently:

Surveys. Survey analysis is hard work–just ask Ken who recently presented results from Juice’s survey on the practice of information visualization in organizations. If a survey is mostly about understanding your audience, rolling up responses by questions can’t be the only approach (though it is the most common). Cross tabs (“displays the joint distribution of two or more variables”) are one direction to go. Another approach is to look for people who share common characteristics or patterns in their responses.

Macrofocus’ SurveyVisualizer is the most innovative survey analysis tool I’ve seen and it emphasizes data at a granular level.

“All the analysis elements are always shown as grey lines in the background. This provides an overview of the ranges and spreads of the individual values for each node, and facilitates the detection of outliers.” (from Visualization of Large-Scale Customer Satisfaction Surveys Using a Parallel Coordinate Tree)

Medical research. Research studies are conducted against carefully defined target and control populations with aggregate statistics across these populations required for conclusions. However, the ability to review the patterns of diagnoses and procedures at the individual patient-level can help test assumptions about the target population and refine the parameters of a study. Better model inputs; better results.

Speech analytics. Michel Guillet at Nexidia recently told me about their approach to speech data:

Nexidia’s speech analytics can mine thousands of hours of audio to categorize, correlate or spot trends. However, it is quite often in identifying and listening to a lone outlier that the application provides its most valuable insights. Some examples of outliers can be the very long call of a particular call type, the extremely abrupt one, the one with the most languages spoken or the one where  no one is speaking at all. An outlier can change your hypotheses and put you in a different direction…perhaps a better one.  Nexidia’s reporting and analysis tools offer many different methodologies including histograms, analysis of means charts and flexible filtration by meta-data to identify outliers in large amounts of data. In addition, Nexidia’s ad-hoc search functionality allows users to search an entire body of audio content at any time, which is often helpful to find the “smoking gun” or a single recording which can make or break an argument.

Of course you can’t be assured of a full or accurate picture when looking at granular data, but somewhere between standard aggregation-based analysis and granular views lies the truth.

 Link to original post

TAGGED:analyticsdata visualizationsurvey analysis
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
Share

Follow us on Facebook

Latest News

AI for MSPs
Autotask and ConnectWise Prove the Benefits of AI in IT
Artificial Intelligence Exclusive
gamer laptops
Data-Driven Tips to Choose the Perfect Gamer Laptop
Best Practices Reviews
smart crosswalk
AI Reduces Pedestrian Collisions With Smart Crosswalks
Artificial Intelligence Exclusive News
ai success
How Leaders Can Unlock AI’s Full Potential for Business Success
Artificial Intelligence Exclusive

Stay Connected

1.2kFollowersLike
33.7kFollowersFollow
222FollowersPin

You Might also Like

Because it’s Friday: The dating equation

4 Min Read

Getting Smarter About Water?

3 Min Read
Bitcoin
AnalyticsBig Data

How Big Data Analytics Benefits Bitcoin & Other Cryptocurrencies

6 Min Read
customer relationship management
Big Data

CRM: Businesses Should Walk Before They Run

3 Min Read

SmartData Collective is one of the largest & trusted community covering technical content about Big Data, BI, Cloud, Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, IoT & more.

ai is improving the safety of cars
From Bolts to Bots: How AI Is Fortifying the Automotive Industry
Artificial Intelligence
AI chatbots
AI Chatbots Can Help Retailers Convert Live Broadcast Viewers into Sales!
Chatbots

Quick Link

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Follow US
© 2008-24 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Go to mobile version
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?