059 | Behind the Scenes of "What's Really Warming The World?" with the Bloomberg Team

Published: Aug. 21, 2015, 2:12 a.m.

b'Hi folks! We have Blacki Migliozzi and Eric Roston from Bloomberg on the show to talk about their recent data graphic piece on climate change called "What\'s Really Warming The World?"\\n\\nThe graphic shows, through a "scrollytelling," what factors may influence the world\'s temperature according to well-established climate models. It guides you through a series of questions and visuals to all you to see for yourself what correlates (spoiler: carbon emissions) and what does not.\\n\\nOn the show we talk about how the Bloomberg team came up with this piece, their interaction with the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) scientists who developed the model, and the many challenges of translating important scientific knowledge into more digestible, but not simplistic, articles that everyone can read.\\n\\nWe also talk about how they took inspiration from the children book "Where\'s Spot?" (which is a nice narrative technique for vis!) and all the delicate design decisions they had to make.\\n\\n... And don\'t miss the moment when Eric drops the huge IPCC (International Panel on Climate Change) report book to give a sense of how big it is!\\n\\nEnjoy the show!\\n\\n---\\nThis episode is sponsored by Qlik who allows you to explore hidden relationships within data that lead to insights. Qlik was named a Top 10 Innovative Growth Company by Forbes, and they published an interesting blog post analyzing the data from the ranking. Check it out! Qlik Sense allows you to create personalized visualizations and dynamic dashboards. You can download it for free at: www.qlik.de/datastories.\\n---\\n\\nLINKS\\n\\nWhat\'s Really Warming the World? - the Bloomberg graphics\\n"Where\'s Spot?" kids book\\nThe CIMIP5 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (61 models from 28 countries evaluated and compared)\\nThe Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (the big tome)\\nThe IPCC synthesis reports (much shorter and easier to read / so many visuals could be improved!)\\nData on global land and ocean temperature records from NASA\\nScientific article on NASA GISS historical simulations\\nArticle on how temperature anomalies are calculated\\nDatasets from the Bloomberg team:\\nObserved land-ocean temperature\\nResponses to climate forcings\\n850 year Preindustrial control experiment'