1. Audiences and Messages
1.1. Augmented Information
1.1.1. Feedforward
1.1.1.1. Dowrick and Dove (1980)
1.1.1.2. Dowrick (1999)
1.1.1.2.1. Dowrick (2012)
1.1.1.3. Smith, Hand and Dowrick (2014)
1.1.1.4. Ste-Marie et al (2011)
1.1.1.5. Moody (2014)
1.1.1.6. Lyons (2009)
1.1.1.7. Mirror Neurons
1.1.1.7.1. Ferrari, Rozzi and Fogassi (2005)
1.1.1.7.2. Vanderwert, Fox and Ferrari (2013)
1.1.1.8. Remembering the future
1.1.1.8.1. Wednesday Aug 20, 2064
1.1.2. Technologies
1.1.2.1. DAQRI Smart Helmet
1.1.2.2. Google Glass
1.1.2.2.1. Paramodic
1.1.2.2.2. Shieber (2014)
1.1.2.2.3. Glass at Work
1.1.2.2.4. Van Meeuwen (2012)
1.1.2.3. Munnerley
1.1.2.4. Drones
1.1.2.4.1. Toronto Reference Library
1.1.2.4.2. First Person View
1.1.2.4.3. Berg and Scharr (204)
1.1.2.5. Osterhout
1.1.2.6. Oculus Rift
1.1.2.6.1. Baker (2015)
1.1.2.6.2. Stanford
1.1.2.6.3. Football
1.1.2.7. Footovision
1.1.2.8. HoloLens
1.1.2.9. NBA
1.1.2.9.1. Samsung Milk VR
1.1.3. Augmented or transformed?
1.1.3.1. The Artvertiser
1.1.3.1.1. Improved reality
1.1.3.1.2. Julian Oliver
1.1.4. The Future of Football (2014)
1.1.5. Andrew Manley and Shaun Williams (2014)
1.1.6. Pulselive
1.1.7. Journalism trends (2014)
1.1.8. Team Performance Exchange
1.1.9. Narrative
1.1.9.1. Glonek & King (2014)
1.1.10. Adriana Krasniansky (2015)
1.1.10.1. Magic Leap
1.1.10.1.1. Team
1.1.10.1.2. Employment
1.1.10.1.3. Digital Lightfield
1.1.10.1.4. Rony Abovitz
1.1.11. Podcasts
1.1.11.1. TSN Hockey
1.2. Visualisation
1.2.1. Literature
1.2.1.1. Edward Tufte
1.2.1.1.1. Mark Zachray and Charlootte Thralls (2004)
1.2.1.1.2. Dona Wong (2010)
1.2.1.1.3. Joey Cherdarchuck (2013)
1.2.1.1.4. Stephen Few (2009)
1.2.1.1.5. Jonathan Corum
1.2.1.1.6. The Challenger Debate
1.2.1.2. Stephen Few
1.2.1.3. Gregor Aisch
1.2.1.3.1. Aisch (2012)
1.2.1.3.2. Aisch (2013)
1.2.1.3.3. Aisch and Quealy (2014)
1.2.1.4. Jean-Luc DuMont
1.2.1.5. Sharon Lin et al (2013)
1.2.1.6. Trina Chiasson (2014)
1.2.1.7. Steve Crandall (2014)
1.2.1.7.1. Airshow
1.2.1.8. Context Matters (2013)
1.2.1.9. Data Wrangling (2014)
1.2.1.10. David Strom (2014)
1.2.1.11. Data Science Central
1.2.1.12. Information Aesthetics
1.2.1.13. Ollivier Dyens (2014)
1.2.1.14. Holly McKendry (2014)
1.2.1.15. Andy Kirk
1.2.1.15.1. Eight Hats (2012)
1.2.1.16. Visualoop
1.2.1.16.1. 40 Keynotes (2014)
1.2.1.17. Chaomei Chen (2010)
1.2.1.18. Steven Heller (2014)
1.2.1.19. Heat Maps
1.2.1.19.1. Cartonerd Blog
1.2.1.20. Anna Li (2013)
1.2.1.21. Andrew Gelman and Anthony Unwin (2011)
1.2.1.22. Andrew Gelman (2011)
1.2.2. Examples
1.2.2.1. New York Times
1.2.2.1.1. Snow Fall
1.2.2.1.2. Sochi 2014
1.2.2.1.3. 4th Down
1.2.2.2. CARTODB
1.2.2.2.1. Style Maps
1.2.2.3. Mitchell Whitelaw
1.2.2.3.1. Data Practice (2008)
1.2.2.4. This is not a ball
1.2.2.5. Connors (2014)
1.2.2.6. Crottty 2014
1.2.2.7. NGA 2014
1.2.2.8. IBM Try Tracker (2014)
1.2.2.8.1. Chris Nott (2014)
1.2.2.8.2. Sarah Warsaw (2014)
1.2.2.9. Phil Worrall (2013)
1.2.2.10. Jacquie Tran (2014)
1.2.2.11. Thomas Lumley (2014)
1.2.2.12. ABC
1.2.2.12.1. Melbourne Cup
1.2.2.12.2. Olympic Athletes
1.2.2.12.3. Football World Cup Goals
1.2.2.12.4. Matt Liddy
1.2.2.13. Data Visualisation Masterclass 2015
1.2.2.13.1. Nick Evershed
1.2.2.13.2. Small Multiples
1.2.2.14. The Economist
1.2.2.14.1. Tom Standage
1.2.2.14.2. Espresso
1.2.2.15. Vox (2014)
1.2.3. Software
1.2.3.1. Adobe
1.2.3.1.1. PostScript
1.2.3.2. Tableau
1.2.3.2.1. Christian Chabot
1.2.3.2.2. 2014 Conference Workshops
1.2.3.2.3. Ben Jones 2014
1.2.3.2.4. Seattle Sounders
1.2.3.2.5. Blog
1.2.3.2.6. Melbourne Conference (2015)
1.2.3.2.7. Sport visualisations
1.2.3.2.8. Ben Jones (2014)
1.2.3.2.9. Jason Gorfine (2015)
1.2.3.2.10. Neil Charles
1.2.3.2.11. Matt Chambers (2015)
1.2.3.2.12. Ryan Sleeper (2015)
1.2.3.2.13. Datablick
1.2.3.3. SAS
1.2.3.3.1. JMP
1.2.3.4. IBM
1.2.3.5. SAP
1.2.3.5.1. Germany
1.2.3.6. Wolfram
1.2.3.7. Perspective
1.2.3.8. R
1.2.3.8.1. R and Storm
1.2.3.9. Storm
1.2.3.10. Silk
1.2.4. Infographics
1.2.4.1. Background
1.2.4.2. #infographic
1.2.4.3. Tools
1.2.4.3.1. Infogr.am
1.2.4.3.2. Easel.ly
1.2.4.3.3. Visual.ly
1.2.4.3.4. Visualize.me
1.2.4.3.5. Google Charts
1.2.4.3.6. Vennage
1.2.4.3.7. Dipity
1.2.4.3.8. Plotly
1.2.4.4. Examples
1.2.4.4.1. Sport Science Examples (France)
1.2.4.4.2. ATP 100
1.2.4.5. Visualoop
1.2.4.6. Mark Uzunian
1.2.4.7. TableTop Whale
1.2.5. Companies
1.2.5.1. ER1C
1.2.5.2. Remotely Piloted Aircraft
1.2.5.3. Dronestagram
1.2.5.3.1. Medium
1.2.5.4. Compelo
1.2.5.5. FLINKLabs
1.2.5.6. Accenture
1.2.5.7. Vorped
1.2.5.7.1. Game Logger
1.2.5.8. Cricmetric
1.2.6. Video
1.2.6.1. The Art of Data Visualisation
1.2.6.2. Thorp
1.2.6.3. McCandless
1.2.7. Art
1.2.7.1. John Berger
1.2.7.2. James Turrell
1.2.7.3. Imants Tillers
1.2.7.4. Colour Music (2014)
1.2.7.5. Lyons (2009)
1.2.7.6. Interactive Composition (2014)
1.2.7.6.1. Volkswagen (2013)
1.2.7.6.2. Food and Music (2014)
1.2.7.7. Doug Bierend (2014)
1.2.7.7.1. Anastasia Samoylova
1.2.7.8. Lisa Roberts (2015)
1.2.7.9. Interstellar
1.2.7.9.1. Christina Warren (2014)
1.2.8. Blog posts
1.2.8.1. Extreme Presentation
1.2.8.2. M G Siegler (2014)
1.2.8.3. Jimmy Coverdale (2014)
1.2.8.4. Damien Saunder (2014)
1.2.8.4.1. GameSetApp
1.2.8.4.2. Diorama
1.2.8.5. Tabletop Whale
1.2.8.6. Quantified Self Blog
1.2.8.6.1. Garrett Miller (2014)
1.2.8.6.2. Patrick Tehubijuluw (2014)
1.2.8.6.3. John Pavlus (2014)
1.2.8.6.4. Salem Al-Mansouri (2014)
1.2.8.7. Australian Open Tennis (2015)
1.2.8.7.1. Slamtracker
1.2.8.7.2. Stephen Withers (2015)
1.2.8.7.3. Game Changers
1.2.8.8. Erik Malinowski (2011)
1.2.8.8.1. Cooper Smith 2014)
1.2.9. Storytelling
1.2.9.1. Susan Tennat (2015)
1.2.9.2. Eman Shurbaji (2014)
1.2.9.3. Aaron Kolbin
1.2.9.3.1. TED Talk (2011)
1.2.9.4. The Future of Storytelling
1.3. Personal Learning Environments
1.3.1. ePortfolios
1.3.1.1. RSS
1.3.1.2. ePortfolio Workshop (2014)
1.3.1.3. Sue Waters (2014)
1.3.1.4. George Couros (2014)
1.3.1.5. You Show: The Daily (2015)
1.3.2. Blogs
1.3.2.1. Association Football
1.3.2.1.1. 7amkickoff
1.3.2.1.2. The Counter Attack
1.3.2.1.3. Ian Macintosh (2014)
1.3.2.2. Harvard Sports Analysis Collective
1.3.2.3. Medium
1.3.2.3.1. Writing Guides
1.3.2.3.2. Adam Pittinger (2014)
1.3.2.3.3. Darrell Cobner
1.3.2.3.4. Unlisted
1.3.2.3.5. Podcasts (2014)
1.3.2.3.6. Rick Klau (2014)
1.3.2.3.7. Andy Carvin (2014)
1.3.2.3.8. Ben Werdmuller (2014)
1.3.2.3.9. #swag (2015)
1.3.2.3.10. David Carr (2014)
1.3.2.3.11. Jan Chipchase (2015)
1.3.3. Twitter
1.3.4. Voxer
1.3.5. Literature
1.3.5.1. Dave Cormier (2010)
1.3.5.2. Werdmuller 2014
1.3.5.3. Charles Jennings (2014)
1.3.5.4. Current Research and Emerging Practice (2014)
1.3.5.5. Attwell (2014)
1.3.5.6. Chris Messina (2014)
1.3.5.6.1. Julien Genestoux (2014)
1.3.5.6.2. Unlisted
1.3.5.7. George Couros (2014)
1.3.5.8. Connie Malamed (2014)
1.3.5.8.1. Wikispaces PLE
1.3.5.9. Michael Feldstein (2014)
1.3.5.10. Alison Hicks and Caroline Stinkinson (2015)
1.3.5.11. Mode and Form (2015)
1.3.6. Produsing
1.3.7. Lyons (2013)
1.3.8. Tools
1.3.8.1. TechSmith
1.3.8.2. iStudio
1.3.8.3. audioBoom
1.3.8.4. Richard Byrne
1.3.8.4.1. Blogs and Websites
1.3.8.4.2. Timeline Creation
1.3.8.4.3. Mindmapping
1.3.8.4.4. Audio Recording
1.3.8.4.5. Video Creation
1.3.8.5. Blog
1.3.8.5.1. Andrew Cheung (2015)
1.3.8.6. Flipagram
1.3.8.7. Twitter Video
1.3.9. Claiming
1.3.9.1. Levine 2014
1.3.9.2. Norman 2014
1.3.10. Smart Cities (2013)
1.3.11. Known
1.3.12. MOOC
1.3.12.1. PLENK 2010
1.3.12.1.1. Rita Kop (2012)
1.3.13. Design Thinking
1.3.13.1. Avi Solomon (2013)
2. Using this Mind Mapping App
2.1. How I created the framework
2.1.1. How I created the content