data-science-for-beginners/3-Data-Visualization/12-visualization-relationships
Julia Muiruri 9f466a4e68 added links to the new quiz app 2022-07-18 12:51:03 +03:00
..
images renumber viz lessons 2021-08-25 09:40:14 -04:00
solution renumber viz lessons 2021-08-25 09:40:14 -04:00
translations added links to the new quiz app 2022-07-18 12:51:03 +03:00
README.md added links to the new quiz app 2022-07-18 12:51:03 +03:00
assignment.md renumber viz lessons 2021-08-25 09:40:14 -04:00
notebook.ipynb renumber viz lessons 2021-08-25 09:40:14 -04:00

README.md

Visualizing Relationships: All About Honey 🍯

Sketchnote by ()[(@sketchthedocs)](https://sketchthedocs.dev)
Visualizing Relationships - Sketchnote by [@nitya](https://twitter.com/nitya)

Continuing with the nature focus of our research, lets discover interesting visualizations to show the relationships between various types of honey, according to a dataset derived from the United States Department of Agriculture.

This dataset of about 600 items displays honey production in many U.S. states. So, for example, you can look at the number of colonies, yield per colony, total production, stocks, price per pound, and value of the honey produced in a given state from 1998-2012, with one row per year for each state.

It will be interesting to visualize the relationship between a given states production per year and, for example, the price of honey in that state. Alternately, you could visualize the relationship between states honey yield per colony. This year span covers the devastating CCD or Colony Collapse Disorder first seen in 2006 (http://npic.orst.edu/envir/ccd.html), so it is a poignant dataset to study. 🐝

Pre-lecture quiz

In this lesson, you can use Seaborn, which you have used before, as a good library to visualize relationships between variables. Particularly interesting is the use of Seaborns relplot function that allows scatter plots and line plots to quickly visualize statistical relationships, which allow the data scientist to better understand how variables relate to each other.

Scatterplots

Use a scatterplot to show how the price of honey has evolved, year over year, per state. Seaborn, using relplot, conveniently groups the state data and displays data points for both categorical and numeric data.

Lets start by importing the data and Seaborn:

You notice that the honey data has several interesting columns, including year and price per pound. Lets explore this data, grouped by U.S. state:

state numcol yieldpercol totalprod stocks priceperlb prodvalue year
AL 16000 71 1136000 159000 0.72 818000 1998
AZ 55000 60 3300000 1485000 0.64 2112000 1998
AR 53000 65 3445000 1688000 0.59 2033000 1998
CA 450000 83 37350000 12326000 0.62 23157000 1998
CO 27000 72 1944000 1594000 0.7 1361000 1998

Create a basic scatterplot to show the relationship between the price per pound of honey and its U.S. state of origin. Make the y axis tall enough to display all the states:

scatterplot 1
scatterplot 1

Now, show the same data with a honey color scheme to show how the price evolves over the years. You can do this by adding a hue parameter to show the change, year over year:

Learn more about the color palettes you can use in Seaborn - try a beautiful rainbow color scheme!

scatterplot 2
scatterplot 2

With this color scheme change, you can see that theres obviously a strong progression over the years in terms of honey price per pound. Indeed, if you look at a sample set in the data to verify (pick a given state, Arizona for example) you can see a pattern of price increases year over year, with few exceptions:

state numcol yieldpercol totalprod stocks priceperlb prodvalue year
AZ 55000 60 3300000 1485000 0.64 2112000 1998
AZ 52000 62 3224000 1548000 0.62 1999000 1999
AZ 40000 59 2360000 1322000 0.73 1723000 2000
AZ 43000 59 2537000 1142000 0.72 1827000 2001
AZ 38000 63 2394000 1197000 1.08 2586000 2002
AZ 35000 72 2520000 983000 1.34 3377000 2003
AZ 32000 55 1760000 774000 1.11 1954000 2004
AZ 36000 50 1800000 720000 1.04 1872000 2005
AZ 30000 65 1950000 839000 0.91 1775000 2006
AZ 30000 64 1920000 902000 1.26 2419000 2007
AZ 25000 64 1600000 336000 1.26 2016000 2008
AZ 20000 52 1040000 562000 1.45 1508000 2009
AZ 24000 77 1848000 665000 1.52 2809000 2010
AZ 23000 53 1219000 427000 1.55 1889000 2011
AZ 22000 46 1012000 253000 1.79 1811000 2012

Another way to visualize this progression is to use size, rather than color. For colorblind users, this might be a better option. Edit your visualization to show an increase of price by an increase in dot circumference:

You can see the size of the dots gradually increasing.

scatterplot 3
scatterplot 3

Is this a simple case of supply and demand? Due to factors such as climate change and colony collapse, is there less honey available for purchase year over year, and thus the price increases?

To discover a correlation between some of the variables in this dataset, lets explore some line charts.

Line charts

Question: Is there a clear rise in price of honey per pound year over year? You can most easily discover that by creating a single line chart:

Answer: Yes, with some exceptions around the year 2003:

line chart 1
line chart 1

Because Seaborn is aggregating data around one line, it displays “the multiple measurements at each x value by plotting the mean and the 95% confidence interval around the mean”. Source. This time-consuming behavior can be disabled by adding ci=None.

Question: Well, in 2003 can we also see a spike in the honey supply? What if you look at total production year over year?

line chart 2
line chart 2

Answer: Not really. If you look at total production, it actually seems to have increased in that particular year, even though generally speaking the amount of honey being produced is in decline during these years.

Question: In that case, what could have caused that spike in the price of honey around 2003?

To discover this, you can explore a facet grid.

Facet grids

Facet grids take one facet of your dataset (in our case, you can choose year to avoid having too many facets produced). Seaborn can then make a plot for each of those facets of your chosen x and y coordinates for more easy visual comparison. Does 2003 stand out in this type of comparison?

Create a facet grid by continuing to use relplot as recommended by Seaborns documentation.

In this visualization, you can compare the yield per colony and number of colonies year over year, side by side with a wrap set at 3 for the columns:

facet grid
facet grid

For this dataset, nothing particularly stands out with regards to the number of colonies and their yield, year over year and state over state. Is there a different way to look at finding a correlation between these two variables?

Dual-line Plots

Try a multiline plot by superimposing two lineplots on top of each other, using Seaborns despine to remove their top and right spines, and using ax.twinx derived from Matplotlib. Twinx allows a chart to share the x axis and display two y axes. So, display the yield per colony and number of colonies, superimposed:

superimposed plots
superimposed plots

While nothing jumps out to the eye around the year 2003, it does allow us to end this lesson on a little happier note: while there are overall a declining number of colonies, the number of colonies is stabilizing even if their yield per colony is decreasing.

Go, bees, go!

🐝❤️ ## 🚀 Challenge

In this lesson, you learned a bit more about other uses of scatterplots and line grids, including facet grids. Challenge yourself to create a facet grid using a different dataset, maybe one you used prior to these lessons. Note how long they take to create and how you need to be careful about how many grids you need to draw using these techniques. ## Post-lecture quiz

Review & Self Study

Line plots can be simple or quite complex. Do a bit of reading in the Seaborn documentation on the various ways you can build them. Try to enhance the line charts you built in this lesson with other methods listed in the docs. ## Assignment

Dive into the beehive