Lindgren, Chris A.2021-08-182021-08-182020-09-151050-6519http://hdl.handle.net/10919/104666What expectations should professionals and the public place on visuals to communicate the uncertainties of complex phenomena? This article demonstrates how charts during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic articulated visual arguments yet also required extended communicative support upon their delivery. The author examines one well-circulated chart comparing COVID-19 case trends per country and highlights its rhetoric by contrasting its design decisions with those of other charts and reports created as the pandemic initially unfolded. To help nonexpert audiences, the author suggests that professional communicators and designers incorporate more contextual information about the data and notable design choices.Pages 65-728 page(s)application/pdfIn CopyrightSocial SciencesBusinessCommunicationBusiness & Economicsvisual rhetoricdata rhetoricdata provenancepresenceinterpretive levelsCommunication & Media Studies1501 Accounting, Auditing and Accountability1503 Business and ManagementFacts Upon Delivery: What Is Rhetorical About Visualized Models?Article - Refereed2021-08-18Journal of Business and Technical Communicationhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1050651920958499351Lindgren, Chris [0000-0002-4954-7598]1552-4574