Hello everyone,
This cool visualization of color <http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/> data from
Wikipedia got some coverage, specifically coverage from* Fast Company
<http://www.fastcodesign.com/3039018/infographic-of-the-day/the-semantics-of…>*.
I think it would a nice addition for our social media feeds. Yana already
has tweeted <https://twitter.com/yanatweets/status/537704579756851200> it
out too. Thanks for reviewing!
We could:
RT from @Wikipedia:
https://twitter.com/FastCoDesign/status/537667197074944002
AND/OR tweet from @Wikipedia too :
t: Eye-popping! New data visualizations based on English & Chinese
Wikipedia "Color" articles is a must-see
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
t: How does language "color" our perception? Data scientist @muyueh went
and found out, using Wikipedia:
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
t: Did you know that the top 3 colors in English are Blue, Green, & Pink?
Cool new Wikipedia visualization explains:
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
t: Red, Blue, Green are the top colors in the Chinese language, says cool
new Wikipedia visualization by @Muyueh
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
t: Do languages have favorite colors? Yes, says data scientist @Muyueh with
vivid data visualization based on Wikipedia:
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
*Facebook/ Google +*
f/g: Do different languages have different ways to describe color? Data
scientist Muyueh Lee wanted to find out. Using the English & Chinese
Wikipedia articles for data, he came up with this eye-popping visualization
that has some interesting findings on how language shapes our perceptions.
Take a look:
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
f/g: "Languages represent our view of the world, and knowing its limits
help us understand how our perception works," states data scientist Muyueh
Lee, the creator of the eye-popping Wikipedia infographic that visualizes
how English and Chinese conceive colors.
http://muyueh.com/greenhoney/
--
Michael Guss
Research Analyst
Wikimediafoundation.org
mguss(a)wikimedia.org