Visual and numerical data in timelines
From Timelines
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We include a variety of visual and numerical data in several timelines. Some of this visual and numerical data is standard and included in many timelines. Other visual and numerical data is specific to the topic of the timeline and does not easily generalize.
The selection of visual and numerical data to show for a given timeline depends on a variety of factors, that we plan to articulate more on this page.
Standard visual and numerical data
Information source | Time period | Granularity of data | Existence and relevance to timeline topic |
---|---|---|---|
Google Trends | 2004 to present | Granularity adjusts to time range selected; finest granularity is hourly | For most topics that are well-defined entities with unambiguous names, Google Trends does a good job as it's possible to pick appropriate search terms or topics. However, in some cases, such as timeline of nonprofit evaluation, the term/topic "nonprofit evaluation" is not a Schelling point for searchers, so the Google Trends in this case are not informative. In other cases, such as timeline of AI safety, there are many variants of the term "AI safety" and so it may be necessary to look at several search terms. |
Wikipedia views | July 2015 to present; some pages have data going as far back as December 2007; limited to after the page creation date | Monthly, but underlying data available at daily granularity | For topics that have Wikipedia pages over a long enough time duration, this is relevant. |
Google Ngram Viewer | Ever since we started having books | Annual | For topics that have relatively well-defined and unambiguous names that have been in use for a long enough time period, this is useful. For instance, something like malaria. On the other hand, for very new topics, or topics with no standard name, this is not useful. |
Google Scholar | Ever since we have recorded publication; often very recent data (last 3-5 years) is incomplete | Annual, but underlying data may have finer granularity | For topics that have relatively well-defined and unambiguous names and that are covered in the scholarly literature, this is useful. |