Income, Race, Bikes

made by stevenleeg, aberke, submitted by aberke
Is the placement of bike-share docks equitable? The map explores this question visually. It displays the progressive placement of bike-share docking stations over time, along with the race and median income of residents in the areas they serve. The map shows the addition of the docks, as well as the changes in income and race throughout the years the bike-share program has been in service. You can toggle the display to see only income, or race, or bikes data, or any of their combinations.

Illustrating Group Theory: A Coloring Book

made and submitted by aberke
This is a “coloring book about math” that is both digital and on paper. All of the illustrations are drawn with javascript and algorithms that are open source: https://github.com/aberke/coloring-book This is a playful book. The mathematical concepts it presents show themselves in illustrations that can be colored on paper or animated and regenerated by interacting with them on the web version. Throughout the book there are thought challenges and coloring challenges to further engage the reader in puzzling over the content. The book is about symmetry. It uses group theory as the mathematical foundation to discuss its content while heavily relying on visuals to communicate the concepts. Group theory and other mathematical studies of symmetry are traditionally covered in college level or higher courses. This is unfortunate because these are the most exciting parts of mathematics and they can be introduced with language that is visual, and with words that avoid jargon. Such an introduction is the intention of this “book”.