Interactivity Lab: Household Pulse Explorable

Overview

Interactivity Lab: Household Pulse Explorable

Goal: Build an interactive application that incorporates fundamental Streamlit components to offer a curated yet open-ended look at a dataset.

The Household Pulse Survey is a weekly survey run by the US Census Bureau that measures how the coronavirus pandemic is impacting households across the country from a social and economic perspective. It’s a valuable and extensive source of data to gain insight on individuals and families, and one that we will only begin to touch on in today’s lab.

To help a user explore this data interactively, we will build a Streamlit application that displays the results of one Household Pulse Survey, which ran from from September 29 to October 11, 2021.

Part 0: Setup (before class)

Before coming to class, please download this repository, set up your virtual environment of choice, and install the dependencies using pip install -r requirements.txt. Now start the application by typing streamlit run streamlit_app.py. You should see the template code running in the browser!

Part 1: Warmup and generating plots

All your code for this lab should go in the streamlit_app.py script. In this file, you’ll see helper functions (some of which you will fill in) and a section labeled “MAIN CODE.” Most of your code will go in this latter section, which is at the top level of the script and will run from top to bottom to render your Streamlit application.

  1. Let’s get started by printing some data to the browser. Implement the load_data function, which should read the CSV file pulse39.csv and return it. Then, in the main code, use Streamlit’s builtin dataframe component to print the first 10 rows of df. You should see a scrollable table like this:

Screenshot of the dataframe being visualized in Streamlit

To get an idea of the distribution of demographics in this dataset, let’s create some summary plots using Altair. (The dataset includes several demographic features, which are listed in the Appendix at the bottom of this document. You may wish to visualize more of these features if you have time.)

  1. Create Altair bar charts to visualize the distributions of race and education levels in the data. You may want to refer to the Altair documentation as you build your charts. Remember that to render an Altair chart in Streamlit, you must call st.altair_chart(chart) on the Altair chart object.

    Tip: To get the counts of a categorical variable to visualize, you can use the Altair count aggregation, like so:

    chart = alt.Chart(df)...encode(
        x='count()',
        y='
         
          '
         
    )
  2. Make your charts interactive! This is super easy with Altair. Just add .interactive() to the end of your Altair function call, and you should be able to pan and zoom around your chart. You should also create some tooltips to show the numerical data values. To do this, add the tooltip parameter to your encoding, like so:

    chart = alt.Chart(df)...encode(
        ...,
        tooltip=['
         
          '
         ]
    ).interactive()

Examine the summary charts and see if you can get a sense of the distributions in the dataset. Take a minute to discuss with your group: Who is well-represented in this data, and who isn’t? Why might this be the case?

Part 2: Interactive Slicing Tool

Up until now, we’ve only used basic interactivity from Altair. But what if we want to allow the user to choose which data gets plotted? Let’s now build a Streamlit interface that lets the user select a group of interest based on some demographic variables (which we’ll call a “slice”), and compare distributions of outcome variables for people within the slice against people outside of it.

We'll allow the user to slice the data based on the following four demographic variables (don't worry, the code will be similar for most of these):

  • gender (includes transgender and an option for other gender identities)
  • race
  • education (highest education level completed)
  • age (integers ranging from 19 to 89)

Once they've sliced the data, we will visualize a set of vaccination-related outcome variables for people inside and outside the slice:

  • received_vaccine (boolean)
  • vaccine_intention (scale from 1 - 5, where 1 is most likely to get the vaccine and 5 is most likely NOT to get the vaccine)
  • why_no_vaccine_ (thirteen boolean columns indicating whether the person does not want to get the vaccine for each reason. Note that multiple reasons can be selected)

If you're interested, the dataset contains a few other sets of outcomes, which you can browse in the Appendix. But for now, let's start slicing!

  1. Decide what controls are best for the user to manipulate each demographic variable. The controls that are supported in Streamlit are listed here.

  2. Build the controls in the “Custom slicing” section of the page. If you run into trouble, refer to the Streamlit docs or ask the TAs! Tip: Take note of how the values are returned from each Streamlit control. You will need this information for the subsequent steps.

  3. Fill in the get_slice_membership function, which builds a Boolean series indicating whether each data point is part of the slice or not. An example of how to do this using gender as a multiselect has already been filled in for you.

  4. Now, use the values returned from each control to create a slice by calling the get_slice_membership function.

  5. Test that your slicing tool is working by writing a line to the page that prints the count and percentage of the data that is contained in the slice. Manipulate some of the controls and check that the size of each slice matches your expectations.

  6. Create visualizations comparing the three outcome variables within the slice to the variables outside the slice. We recommend using an st.metric component to show the vaccination rate and the vaccine intention fields, and a bar chart to show the distribution of reasons for not getting the vaccine.

    Tip: To display the vaccine hesitancy reasons, the dataframe will require some transformation before passing it to Altair. We’ve provided a utility function to help you do this, which you can use like so:

    # Creates a dataframe with columns 'reason' (string) and 'agree' (boolean)
    vaccine_reasons_inslice = make_long_reason_dataframe(df[slice_labels], 'why_no_vaccine_')
    
    chart = alt.Chart(vaccine_reasons_inslice, title='In Slice').mark_bar().encode(
        x='sum(agree)',
        y='reason:O',
    ).interactive()
    # ...

Here is an example of what your slicing tool could look like (here we are using st.columns to make a 2-column layout):

Screenshot of an example showing a comparison of reasons why people are opting not to get the vaccine

With your group, try slicing the data a few different ways. Discuss whether you find any subgroups that have different outcomes than the rest of the population, and see if you can hypothesize why this might be!

Part 3 (bonus): Interactive Random Sampling

If you have time, you can implement another simple interactive function that users will appreciate. While large data exploration tools are powerful ways to see overall trends, the individual stories of people in the dataset can sometimes get lost. Let’s implement a tool to randomly sample from the dataset and portray information relevant to the topic you investigated above.

  1. In the “Person sampling” section, build a button to retrieve a random person.

  2. When the button is pressed, write code to retrieve a random row from the dataset. You can use the pandas.DataFrame.sample function for this.

  3. Display the information from this datapoint in a human-readable way. For example, one possible English description of a datapoint could look like this:

    This person is a 65-year-old Straight, Married Female of White race (non-hispanic). They have not received the vaccine, and their intention to not get the vaccine is 3.0. Their reasons for not getting the vaccine include: Concerned about possible side effects, Don't know if it will protect me, Don't believe I need it, Don't think COVID-19 is a big threat

As in Part 2, feel free to communicate this information in the way that feels most appropriate to you.

Discuss with your group: What do you notice about individual stories generated this way? What are the strengths and drawbacks of sampling and browsing individual datapoints compared to looking at summary visualizations?

Appendix: Dataset Features

Demographic Variables

  • age and age_group (age_group bins the ages into four categories)
  • gender (includes transgender and an option for other gender identities)
  • sexual_orientation
  • marital_status
  • race and hispanic (the US Census defines ‘Hispanic’ as being independent of self-identified race, which is why it is coded as a separate variable)
  • education (highest education level completed)
  • num_children_hhld (the number of children living in the person’s household)
  • had_covid (boolean)

Outcome Variables

Reasons for vaccine hesitancy

To study vaccination rates, people’s intentions to get or not get the vaccine, and their reasons for this, the following columns are available:

  • received_vaccine (boolean)
  • vaccine_intention (scale from 1 - 5, where 1 is most likely to get the vaccine and 5 is most likely NOT to get the vaccine)
  • why_no_vaccine_ (thirteen boolean columns indicating whether the person does not want to get the vaccine for each reason. Note that multiple reasons can be selected)

Economic and food insecurity

The dataset includes columns that may be useful to understand people’s levels of financial and food insecurity:

  • expenses_difficulty (scale from 1 - 4, 1 is least difficulty, 4 is most difficulty paying expenses)
  • housing_difficulty (scale from 1 - 4, same as above for paying next rent or mortgage payment)
  • food_difficulty (scale from 1 - 4, same as above for having enough food)
  • why_not_enough_food_ (four boolean columns indicating whether the person experienced each reason for not having enough food. Note that multiple reasons can be selected)

Mental health

The dataset also includes some columns for understanding people’s recent mental health status:

  • freq_anxiety, freq_worry, freq_little_interest, freq_depressed (scale from 1 - 4 where 1 indicates not at all, 4 indicates nearly every day in the past two weeks)
  • mh_prescription_meds (boolean whether the person has taken prescription medication for mental health)
  • mh_services (boolean whether the person has received mental health services in the past month)
  • mh_notget (boolean whether the person sought mental health services but did not receive them)
C++ Environment InitiatorVisual Studio Code C / C++ Environment Initiator

Visual Studio Code C / C++ Environment Initiator Latest Version : v 1.0.1(2021/11/08) .exe link here About : Visual Studio Code에서 C/C++환경을 MinGW GCC/G

Junho Yoon 2 Dec 19, 2021
Program Input Nilai Mahasiswa Menggunakan Fungsi

PROGRAM INPUT NILAI MAHASISWA MENGGUNAKAN FUNGSI Nama : Maulana Reza Badrudin Nim : 312110510 Matkul : Bahas Pemograman DESKRIPSI Deklarasi dicti

Maulana Reza Badrudin 1 Jan 05, 2022
A corona information module

A corona information module

Fayas Noushad 3 Nov 28, 2021
Aoc 2021 kedro playground with python

AOC 2021 Overview This is your new Kedro project, which was generated using Kedro 0.17.5. Take a look at the Kedro documentation to get started. Rules

1 Dec 20, 2021
TrainingBike - Code, models and schematics I've used to interface my stationary training bike with PC.

TrainingBike Code, models and schematics I've used to interface my stationary training bike with PC. You can find more information about the project i

1 Jan 01, 2022
Module-based cryptographic tool

Cryptosploit A decryption/decoding/cracking tool using various modules. To use it, you need to have basic knowledge of cryptography. Table of Contents

/SNESE_AR\ 33 Nov 27, 2022
Converts a base copy of Pokemon BDSP's masterdatas into a more readable and editable Pokemon Showdown Format.

Showdown-BDSP-Converter Converts a base copy of Pokemon BDSP's masterdatas into a more readable and editable Pokemon Showdown Format. Download the lat

Alden Mo 2 Jan 02, 2022
A powerful and user-friendly binary analysis platform!

angr angr is a platform-agnostic binary analysis framework. It is brought to you by the Computer Security Lab at UC Santa Barbara, SEFCOM at Arizona S

6.3k Jan 02, 2023
Windows symbol tables for Volatility 3

Windows Symbol Tables for Volatility 3 This repository is the Windows Symbol Table storage for Volatility 3. How to Use $ git clone https://github.com

JPCERT Coordination Center 31 Dec 25, 2022
Python calculator made with tkinter package

Python-Calculator Python calculator made with tkinter package. works both on Visual Studio Code Or Any Other Ide Or You Just Copy paste The Same Thing

Pro_Gamer_711 1 Nov 11, 2021
Nimbus - Open Source Cloud Computing Software - 100% Apache2 licensed

⚠️ The Nimbus infrastructure project is no longer under development. ⚠️ For more information, please read the news announcement. If you are interested

Nimbus 194 Jun 30, 2022
Astroquery is an astropy affiliated package that contains a collection of tools to access online Astronomical data.

Astroquery is an astropy affiliated package that contains a collection of tools to access online Astronomical data.

The Astropy Project 631 Jan 05, 2023
Python template for Advent of Code event

Advent of Code Python Starter A tamplate for Advent of Code write in Python. Usage The project use poetry for project manager. Clone this repository a

Leonardo Gago 6 Dec 31, 2022
Safe temperature monitor for baby's room. Made for Raspberry Pi Pico.

Baby Safe Temperature Monitor This project is meant to build a temperature safety monitor for a baby or small child's room. Studies have shown the ris

Jeff Geerling 72 Oct 09, 2022
An html wrapper for python

MessySoup What is it? MessySoup is a python wrapper for html elements. While still a ways away, the main goal is to be able to build a wesbite straigh

4 Jan 05, 2022
The little-endian version of MessagePack

MessagePackEL This is the little-endian version of MessagePack, except the endianness is different, the rest is exactly the same as MessagePack. C lib

dukelec 9 May 13, 2022
Very simple encoding scheme that will encode data as a series of OwOs or UwUs.

OwO Encoder Very simple encoding scheme that will encode data as a series of OwOs or UwUs. The encoder is a simple state machine. Still needs a decode

1 Nov 15, 2021
A browser login credentials thief for windows and Linux

Thief 🦹🏻 A browser login credentials thief for windows and Linux Python script to decrypt login credentials from browsers in windows or linux Decryp

Ash 1 Dec 13, 2021
A program that makes all 47 textures of Optifine CTM only using 2 textures

A program that makes all 47 textures of Optifine CTM only using 2 textures

1 Jan 22, 2022
An open-source Python project series where beginners can contribute and practice coding.

Python Mini Projects A collection of easy Python small projects to help you improve your programming skills. Table Of Contents Aim Of The Project Cont

Leah Nguyen 491 Jan 04, 2023