Analyzing how patterns evolve over time in multi-dimensional datasets is challenging—traditional time-series methods often struggle with interpretability when comparing multiple entities across different scales. This talk introduces a clustering-based framework that transforms continuous data into categorical trajectories, enabling intuitive visualization and comparison of temporal patterns.What & Why: The method combines quartile-based categorization with modified Hamming distance to create interpretable "trajectory fingerprints" for entities over time. This approach is particularly valuable for policy analysis, economic comparisons, and any domain requiring longitudinal pattern recognition.Who: Data scientists and analysts working with temporal datasets, policy researchers, and anyone interested in comparative analysis across entities with different scales or distributions.Type: Technical presentation with practical implementation examples using Python (pandas, scikit-learn, matplotlib). Moderate mathematical content balanced with intuitive visualizations.Takeaway: Attendees will learn a novel approach to temporal pattern analysis that bridges the gap between complex statistical methods and accessible, policy-relevant insights. You'll see practical implementations analyzing 60+ years of fiscal policy data across 8 countries, with code available for adaptation to your own datasets.
talk-data.com
Topic
Matplotlib
data_visualization
plotting_library
python
1
tagged
Activity Trend
6
peak/qtr
2020-Q1
2026-Q1
Top Events
O'Reilly Data Science Books
37
O'Reilly Data Visualization Books
11
SciPy 2025
5
PyData Boston 2025
1
Data + AI Summit 2025
1
O'Reilly Business Intelligence Books
1
PyConDE & PyData Berlin 2023
1
PyData Amsterdam 2025
1
Data & AI with Mukundan | Learn AI by Building
1
O'Reilly AI & ML Books
1
Databricks DATA + AI Summit 2023
1
O'Reilly Data Engineering Books
1
Filtering by:
PyData Boston 2025
×