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Science 23 September 2005:
Vol. 309. no. 5743, p. 1989
DOI: 10.1126/science.309.5743.1989

Special Feature

2005 Visualization Challenge

Curt Suplee, Director, Office Of Legislative and Public Affairs, NSF

Monica Bradford, Executive Editor, Science

Read about the winners:

Some of science's most powerful statements are not made in words. From the diagrams of DaVinci to Hooke's microscopic bestiary, the beaks of Darwin's finches, Rosalind Franklin's x-rays, or the latest photographic marvels retrieved from the remotest galactic outback, visualization of research has a long and literally illustrious history. To illustrate is, etymologically and actually, to enlighten.

You can do science without graphics. But it's very difficult to communicate it in the absence of pictures. Indeed, some insights can only be made widely comprehensible as images. How many people would have heard of fractal geometry or the double helix or solar flares or synaptic morphology or the cosmic microwave background if they had been described solely in words?

To the general public, whose support sustains the global research enterprise, these and scores of other indispensable concepts exist chiefly as images. They become part of the essential iconic lexicon. And they serve as a source of excitement and motivation for the next generation of researchers.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) and Science created the Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge to celebrate that grand tradition-and to encourage its continued growth. In a world where science literacy is dismayingly rare, illustrations provide the most immediate and influential connection between scientists and other citizens, and the best hope for nurturing popular interest. Indeed, they are now a necessity for public understanding of research developments: In an increasingly graphics-oriented culture, where people acquire the majority of their news from TV and the World Wide Web, a story without a vivid and intriguing image is often no story at all.

We urge you and your colleagues to contribute to the next competition, details of which will be available on NSF's Web site (www.nsf.gov), and to join us in congratulating the winners.

Susan Mason of NSF organized this year's challenge; Carolyn Gramling of Science's news staff wrote the text that accompanies the winning images displayed in the following pages; and Science's online editor Stewart Wills put together a special Web presentation at www.sciencemag.org/sciext/vis2005. In addition, Graham Johnson, who won first place in the Illustration category, is profiled on Science's Next Wave (www.nextwave.org).

Panel of Judges
Gary Lees
 Chair and Director,
 Department of Art as Applied to Medicine,
 Johns Hopkins University,
 Baltimore, Maryland
Thomas Lucas
 Thomas Lucas Productions,
 New York, New York
Felice Frankel
 Research Scientist,
 Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
 Cambridge, Massachusates
Donna J. Cox
 Professor,
 School of Art and Design,
 University of Illinois,
 Urbana- Champaign
Michael Keegan
 Assistant Managing Editor, News Art,
 The Washington Post
 Washington, D.C.






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