How Much We Work
Posted by Armando Brito Mendes | Filed under Data Science, visualização
Gráficos de alfinetes
By Nathan Yau
In our younger years, we have school and more important things to do, but then we get older and there are bills to pay. The charts below show the shift and the sweet release of retirement.
MARRYING YOUNGER AND OLDER
Posted by Armando Brito Mendes | Filed under visualização
Um histograma dinâmico com uma barra móvel
By Nathan Yau
In our earlier years, we tend to date and marry others who are around our age. However, this is not true for everyone. Variation kicks in when you look at the later years, consider multiple marriages, divorce, separation, and opposite-sex versus same-sex relationships.
Check the following interactive chart to see how the age distributions break down, among partners who live together.
Tags: casamento, histograma, idades
Age and Occupation
Posted by Armando Brito Mendes | Filed under Data Science, estatística, visualização
Um bom gráfico interativo de intervalos de confiança de idades, um para cada emprego
By Nathan Yau
Whether it’s because of experience, physical ability, or education level, some jobs tend towards a certain age of worker more than others. For example, fast food counter workers tend to be younger, whereas school bus drivers tend to be older.
These are the age ranges for 529 jobs. Search for your job or look at others.
Tags: análise de dados, belo, empregos, Estat Descritiva, idades
Olympians are probably older — and younger — than you think
Posted by Armando Brito Mendes | Filed under Data Science, estatística, relatórios, visualização
Um relatório com vários gráficos tipos histogramas unidimensionais (gráficos de pontos)
There were some outliers in the old days, but even in Tokyo, athletes range from boomers through Gen Z
By Bonnie Berkowitz andArtur Galocha July 31
As you would expect, two-thirds of the roughly 11,700 Olympians competing in Tokyo are in their 20s. Prime of life, blah blah blah.
But the rest of the athletes range from two preteens to four 60-somethings, and the older competitors nudged up the average age to 27 for the first time since 1948.
Since the first modern Olympics in 1896, the wide range of sports has allowed for a wide range of sportsmen — and sportswomen, beginning in 1900.
A 10-year-old boy competed in that first Games, and several septuagenarians have suited up. (A 98-year-old sort of competed in 1928, but whether he counts is debatable because he was entered in the art competition and also was dead.)
Tags: gráfico de pontos, idades, olimpiadas