My popular projects include flipbookr and ggplot2 extensions like ggcalendar, ggcirclepack and others.
Professionally, I've worked in higher education and government where my work involved analytics, teaching, and policy implementation.
I'm interested in lightening cognative load, first, when interpreting data visualizations and, second, when writing and reading code used to build data visualizations. I believe the latter --- attention to coding tools --- can greatly complement the former -- communication via visualizations. With logical, easy-to-use tools, we're more likely to build compelling, easy-to-interpret visualizations, rather than stopping at 'good enough'. So I'm a big fan of the elegant and intuitive grammar of graphics visualization frameworks.
My technical expertise is in the ggplot2 and currently focus on extension and supporting extenders. I co-organize the ggplot2 extenders club, have created 'easy geom recipes' together with students, am writing ggplot2 extension cookbook, and developing 'express' methodologies for Stat extension (why shouldn't everyone be creating and using Stats and why shouldn't they be using them even on an ad hoc basis?). I've studied some of these new educational materials via survey response and focus groups. For more on the motivation for these efforts, see 'everyday ggplot2 extension'.
I'm interested in the transformational effects that access to custom, principled data visualization tooling can have on analytic and teaching spaces. I am working on greater accessibility for researchers, academics, and students to bespoke tooling.
Previously, I had a greater focus on illuminating the grammar of base ggplot2, creating materials like a ggplot2 grammar guide and the ggplot2 flipbook.