google fusion tables

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Google Fusion Tables A guide to visualizing patent data By Alicia Wallace

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Google Fusion Tables : A guide to visualizing patent data

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Page 1: Google Fusion Tables

Google Fusion TablesA guide to visualizing patent data

By Alicia Wallace

Page 2: Google Fusion Tables

From your Google Docs tab, click on “CREATE”

Page 3: Google Fusion Tables

From the “CREATE” tab, select TABLE

Page 4: Google Fusion Tables

Upload your file. (I created an Excel document containing data from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the U.S. Census)

Page 5: Google Fusion Tables

The Excel chart in raw form. Google Fusion can geocode by location, but I uploaded latitude and longitude for each state (from

gpsvisualizer.com/geocoder) just to be certain.

Page 6: Google Fusion Tables

Once uploaded, you’ll be given a chance to verify the information.

Page 7: Google Fusion Tables

Name the file, provide attribution, include a description and any necessary links.

Page 8: Google Fusion Tables

The spreadsheet data is funneled into the Google Fusion Table

Page 9: Google Fusion Tables

After clicking on the Visualize tab, select map to visualize the data.

Page 10: Google Fusion Tables

By clicking on the red markers, you can view the information included in the table. You can clean up the look of how the information is presented by

clicking on the “Configure info window” link.

Page 11: Google Fusion Tables

From here, you can select which tabs you’d like to have shown. By clicking on “Custom,” you can tweak the html coding and add in some style.

Page 12: Google Fusion Tables

I’m going to make the state name a bigger font, have it colored blue and delete the title to eliminate redundancy.

Page 13: Google Fusion Tables

This is what results from those changes. However, to bring more meaning to this map, I’d like to compare the states’ patents per 100,000 citizens. To do this, I’ll “fuse” this

map with an existing map to show the geographic boundaries of the states.

Page 14: Google Fusion Tables

To search for other Google Fusion Tables, visit: www.google.com/fusiontables/search.

Page 15: Google Fusion Tables

After searching for U.S. states, what I’m looking for are the “KML Boundaries,” which will result in the borders and context.

Page 16: Google Fusion Tables

This is what the U.S. States file looks like in table form. To view it as a map, click the Visualize tab and select Map.

Page 17: Google Fusion Tables

And here it is in map form. The next step involves bringing the two maps together. Click on the Merge button to combine this publicly created map with the one created earlier. (Be sure to have the original patents map publicly available).

Page 18: Google Fusion Tables

When merging tables, you’ll want to make sure that you match one of the columns of data. In this case, both tables have the state postal codes. Name the new table.

(NOTE: The information in these columns need to be exact or the data may not visualize in the charts or map as expected.)

Page 19: Google Fusion Tables

Now that the tables are merged, let’s configure the info windows like they were in the previous table.

Page 20: Google Fusion Tables

Configure the info windows through the selection of cells and, if desired, through the custom html styling. These can be styled further with html and

made more pleasing to the eye, but this will do for now.

Page 21: Google Fusion Tables

Now, when you click on a state, this is the information you see. I want to go a step further and make it easier to see this data. Click on “Configure styles” to

create a gradient of the states’ “Patents per 100,000 citizens.”

Page 22: Google Fusion Tables

From this panel, you can incorporate various styles on the map. The gradient tab is a good way to show a comparison of this statistic; however, I’m going to

use the Buckets tab to break these out into four distinct number classes.

Page 23: Google Fusion Tables

The intensity of patents per 100,000 citizens across various states.