Scientific Data Visualization

Scientific Data Visualization for Publication-Grade Research Figures

FigureGuild transforms raw experimental data into publication-grade scientific visualizations. Paste your data, choose your visualization, and export at your journal's required DPI — no coding, no design software.

Visualize your data →

Scientific visualization types

Comparative data: bar, box, and violin plots

The most common figures in biomedical papers. Bar charts with individual data points, box plots with quartile display, and violin plots showing full distribution. All include significance brackets, error bars (SD/SEM/CI), and p-value notation.

Survival analysis: Kaplan-Meier curves

Kaplan-Meier survival curves with confidence intervals, at-risk table, and log-rank test p-value. Standard for clinical and oncology research.

Omics: volcano plots and heatmaps

Volcano plots for differential expression (RNA-seq, proteomics) with FDR threshold and fold-change cutoff. Heatmaps with hierarchical clustering, Z-score normalization, and column/row annotations.

Dimensionality reduction: PCA plots

PCA scatter plots with variance-explained axis labels, 95% confidence ellipses by group, and sample labels. Standard for bulk RNA-seq and proteomics quality control.

Meta-analysis: forest plots

Forest plots with weighted study squares, confidence interval lines, pooled estimate diamond, and heterogeneity statistics (I², Q, τ²).

Scientific data visualization vs general charting

General-purpose charting tools (Excel, Google Sheets, Tableau) produce charts for business dashboards. Scientific data visualization for publication has fundamentally different requirements:

Pixel-exact dimensions

Charts must be 89 mm (not 800 px) wide for Nature — physical size for print, not screen.

Statistical annotation

Significance brackets, post-hoc test results, and exact p-values — not available in Excel.

Scientific chart types

Kaplan-Meier, volcano, forest, PCA — not in general charting tools.

1000 DPI export

Journals require 1000 DPI for line art — far beyond what Excel or Sheets produces.

Visualize your research data today

Free to start. All major scientific chart types included.

Open FigureGuild →