Article ID: CBB025509663

A Framework for Visual Communication at Nature (2016)

unapi

The scientific journal Nature, published weekly since 1869, serves as an excellent case study in visual communication. While journals are becoming increasingly specialist, Nature remains firmly multidisciplinary; and unlike many scientific journals, it contains original journalism, opinion pieces, and expert analysis in addition to peer-reviewed research papers. This variety of content types–covering an extensive range of scientific disciplines–translates into a wide and varied audience, and the need to employ an equally wide variety of communication styles.For example, a research paper may employ technical language to communicate to a highly specialized audience in that field, whereas a news story on the same subject will explain the science to an educated lay audience, often adding a wider context and stripping out acronyms. Each type of piece will use a communication approach tailored for its intended audience.This is true for visual content as well: the intended audience of a scientific figure, illustration or data visualization will determine the design approach to that visual. At Nature, given the high volume of content plus high quality standards, this process is applied in a fairly systematic way, using a framework to guide creative decision-making. That framework is described here, along with a discussion of best practices for the design of research figures and graphics by context.

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Authors & Contributors
Tatiana Pina
Domaradzki, Jan
Sara Moreno-Tarín
Molek-Kozakowska, Katarzyna
Fairman, Elisabeth R.
Art, Yale Center for British
Journals
Science Communication
Public Understanding of Science
Science as Culture
Publishers
U. of Minnesota Press
VU University Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
University of Illinois Press
National Library of Australia
Fides
Concepts
Public understanding of science
Communication of scientific ideas
Journalism
Visual representation; visual communication
Periodicals; serials
Science and art
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
19th century
18th century
17th century
Places
Great Britain
Denmark
Australia
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