[...] * An interesting approach would be to look into two, or even three, tiers of visualisation tools for different types of users: experts and analysts, decision makers (which are usually not technical experts but must understand the results, make informed decisions and communicate their rationale), and the general public. Visualisation for the general public will support buy-in for the resulting policies as well as the practice of data-driven policy making in general.
For example, see: Vornhagen, H., Young, K. and Zarrouk, M. (2019) Understanding My City through Dashboards. How Hard Can It Be?. In Virkar, S., Glassey, O., Janssen, M., Parycek, P., Polini, A, Re, B., Reichstädter, P., Scholl, H.J., Tambouris, E. (eds.) EGOV-CeDEM-ePart 2019: Proceedings of Ongoing Research, Practitioners, Posters, Workshops, and Projects of the International Conference EGOV-CeDEM-ePart 2019. 2-4 September 2019, San Benedetto del Tronto, Italy. (pp. 21-30).
Shefali Virkar, 30/09/2019 15:21