Posted on 01/13/2014 3:01:56 PM PST by lbryce
This map, created by Dustin Cable at University of Virginia's Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, is the most comprehensive representation of racial distribution in America ever made. Here: New York City.
White: blue dots; African American: green dots; Asian: red; Latino: orange; all others: brown
Last year, a pair of researchers from Duke University published a report with a bold title: The End of the Segregated Century. U.S. cities, the authors concluded, were less segregated in 2012 than they had been at any point since 1910. But less segregated does not necessarily mean integratedsomething this incredible map makes clear in vivd color.
The map, created by Dustin Cable at University of Virginias Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, is stunningly comprehensive. Drawing on data from the 2010 U.S. Census, it shows one dot per person, color-coded by race. Thats 308,745,538 dots in allaround 7 GB of visual data. It isnt the first map to show the countrys ethnic distribution, nor is it the first to show every single citizen, but it is the first to do both, making it the most comprehensive map of race in America ever created.
This is the most comprehensive map of race in America ever created.
White people are shown with blue dots; African-Americans with green; Asians with red; and Latinos with orange, with all other race categories from the Census represented by brown. Since the dots are smaller than pixels at most zoom levels, Cable assigned shades of color based on the multiple dots therein. From a distance, for example, certain neighborhoods will look purple, but zooming-in reveals a finer-grained breakdown of red and blueor, really, black and white.
There are a lot of moving parts in this process, so this can cause different shades of color to appear at different zoom levels in really dense areas, like you see in NYC, Cable explains. I played around with dot size and transparency for a while and settled on the current scheme as being adequate. You can read more about Cables methodology here, but it comes down to this: When youre dealing with 300 million dots at varying levels of zoom, getting the presentation just right is as much an art as a science.
Looking at the map, every city tells a different story. In California, for example, major cities arent just diverse, theyre integrated to a great degree, too. We see large swaths of Sacramento dotted variously with reds, blues, oranges, greens and browns. Los Angeles is more distinctly clustered, but groups still bleed into one another.
Click on the link to the site and explore the additional pages. To explore the map either click on the rectangular link colored red or the link posted below.
This map is prejudiced against South Asians.
It is like there is an invisible wall from Texas straight up of people to no people.
I wonder if there are any undotumented aliens in this map??
Natural segregation is interesting. People like people like them. Natural inclination.
Maybe just me, but it looks like the South is more integrated than many areas. Interesting...
Lol. I see what you did there.
heh
Almost every city I look at in CT looks like it’s filled with pus or gangrene.
That’s the way it was designed to look.
Bflr
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