As Alfred Blumstein noted in the Foreword, we
started out to edit a book describing the new
visualization techniques that have recently been
developed for research into crime and criminal
justice. We felt that this was an important goal,
since articles in social science and criminology
journals usually present data analyses in tables,
which can be mind-numbing, rather than in fi gures
and charts. In contrast, most articles in hard
science journals are usually fi lled with graphical
representations of data rather than relying
entirely on tables. Our feeling was that not
enough attention has been paid to those techniques
in the social sciences (Maltz, 1994 ).
Specifi c to sociology, Healy and Moody ( 2014 )
argue that in its infancy sociology did, in fact,
employ innovative visualizations, e.g., Du Bois ’s
The Philadelphia Negro ’s (1898/1967) choropleth
maps, time series, and table-and-histogram
combinations, but that in later years the employment
of visualizations was hampered by thoughts
that compared to causal-inferential modeling
they were unduly descriptive, were thought to be
unsophisticated, and tended to lag behind the
computational abilities of the day (p. 107).