That seems to be a better representation the first one didn't make sense as the total area of red seemed larger for liberals like there was more of a data sample, but after looking at the second one it just seems they are more random and the conservative seem to follow more of a similar pattern.

I find it interesting in to the aspects of how people brains work. It would seem to me that it matches up with studies of people who have a very specialized skill sets vs ones with general skill sets. Ones that focus on very specific skills have a tendency to not function well outside of it. Those that have more general skills in a larger set tend to do better outside but overall are poor functioning at most. It would make you think that the human brain does well at storing similar data and not so well at random non related information. Must be something with our de-duplication algorithms that lets us store mass amounts of information. Hmm or maybe we are built with FAT filesystem that gets fragmented easily...


On 2/3/25 3:13 PM, ch...@go-mtc.com wrote:
Another representation of the data:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-12227-0/figures/4
*From:* Josh Luthman
*Sent:* Monday, February 3, 2025 1:54 PM
*To:* AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group
*Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] OT Political
What's the difference between say 1 and 2 oclock?  Why isn't this just a bar/line graph?
On Mon, Feb 3, 2025 at 3:49 PM <ch...@go-mtc.com> wrote:

    This explains a lot:
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-12227-0/figures/5
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