News
Around 15 years ago, for biologists awash with data, visualization was often dealt with as an add-on, an afterthought. Fast-forward to today, and data visualization is making something of a comeback.
The National Science Foundation and the journal Science announce the winners of last year's contest for the best visualizations in science and engineering.
The best visualizations communicate complex subjects with evocative images, enlightening illustrations, and engrossing interactive media–all things we value tremendously at Popular Science.
In explaining complicated science, a picture can be worth far more than a thousand words. Science visualization brings to life the often under-appreciated beauty of the way the world works–from ...
Science Visualization Discussed at VIVID in SydneyA guest post by Gaël McGill, Ph.D., Founder & CEO, Digizyme Inc., and Faculty & Director of Molecular Visualization, Harvard Medical School Date ...
Digizyme Inc., launches Clarafi, a new science visualization hub for high-quality training, innovative software, courses, and curated resources for sc ...
Some of the most impressive images in science are produced when researchers take numerical data and represent it visually through modeling and computer graphics. The Department of Energy honored ...
Let’s face it: science can be complicated. Many people don’t fully understand how viruses ravage the body, how scientists quantify climate change, or even how their own tablets and smartphones ...
Science and the National Science Foundation have now given us the excuse to take that step back: the International Science & Engineering Visualization Challenge entries have been judged, and the ...
Now in its 15th year, the theme for Digital Science’s 2025 Catalyst Grant is: Data visualization. Up to £25,000 will be awarded to individuals or startups for their technology-driven ideas.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results