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September 10, 2012

"Follow the Money: Human Mobility and Effective Communities" (Image 1)

"Follow the Money: Human Mobility and Effective Communities," by Christian Thiemann and Daniel Grady, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill.

Ever wonder where your dollar bills travel after you plop them down for a cup of coffee? The website "Where's George?" allows you to do just that: Record your bill's serial number and then track its journeys as other people spend it across the country. But it's more than just a game, because every time a dollar is spent in a new place, it means someone moved it there. Thiemann and Grady have been using the website's data to study how people move within the United States.

They produced this video to explain their project and animate the results. Tiny bills stretch out from county to county on a map of the contiguous U.S. Some places, such as Los Angeles, Calif., have many bills passing through it from across the nation, while others, such as Anderson County in Tennessee--Grady's home--have just a few that mainly cycle locally. (You can view the video this screen shot was taken from by scrolling down the page to "Follow the Money: Human Mobility and Effective Communities" and clicking "Video" Here.)

This image was tied for First Place in the Non-Interactive Media (Screen Shots) category of the 2009 International Science & Engineering Visualization Challenge (SciVis) competition, sponsored by the National Science Foundation and the journal Science. The competition is held each year to celebrate the grand tradition of science visualization and to encourage its continued growth. The spirit of the competition is to communicate science, engineering and technology for education and journalistic purposes.

To learn more about the competition and view all the winning entries, see the NSF SciVis Special Report. (Date of Image: September 2009) [Image 1 of 5 related images. See Image 2.]

Credit: Christian Thiemann and Daniel Grady, Northwestern University


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