About pages for SOCR Motion Charts

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* [[Help_pages_for_SOCR_Motion_Charts]]
* [[Help_pages_for_SOCR_Motion_Charts]]
* [[SOCR_MotionCharts | SOCR Motion Charts Summary]]
* [[SOCR_MotionCharts | SOCR Motion Charts Summary]]
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* [[SOCR_Data | SOCR Datasets]]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chart Chart definition]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chart Chart definition]
{{translate|pageName=http://wiki.stat.ucla.edu/socr/index.php?title=About_pages_for_SOCR_Motion_Charts}}
{{translate|pageName=http://wiki.stat.ucla.edu/socr/index.php?title=About_pages_for_SOCR_Motion_Charts}}

Revision as of 02:08, 4 January 2009

Contents

SOCR Motion Charts

SOCR Motion Charts are developed by the Statistics Online Computational Resource. Lead developers on this project are Jameel Al-Aziz, Jenny Cui and Ivo Dinov. Motion Charts allow the visualization of multivariate and high-dimensional data that has a temporal or longitudinal dimension. SOCR Motion Charts use categorical, ordinal, nominal, discrete and continuous types of variables.

Motion Chart Controls

  • Refer to the Complete List of SOCR Charts and the Charts Video Tutorials
  • Right click to show the pop-up menu.
  • To zoom in: Choose "ZoomIn" from the pop-up menu or hold on the left mouse button and focus on the area you want to zoom in and drag toward lower_right corner.
  • To zoom out: Choose "ZoomOut" from the the pop-up menu or hold on the left mouse button and drag toward upper_left corner.
  • To change chart properties such as background color, Font, outline stroke: Choose "Properties" from the pop-up menu and make the change to Title/Plot.

General Motion Chart Description

  • A bar chart is a chart with rectangular bars of lengths usually proportional to the magnitudes or frequencies of what they represent.
  • A pie chart is a circular chart divided into segments, illustrating relative magnitudes or frequencies. In a pie chart, the arc length of each segment and consequently its central angle and area, is proportional to the quantity it represents. Together, the segments create a full disk.

See also



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