Hans Rosling,a Swedish professor of global health and well-known public educator, has died aged 68, and his Gapminder foundation has announced,the BBC reports.
Mr Rosling was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer a year ago and died in Uppsala, Sweden.
He was known for lively presentations that used data and animation to elaborate global development in a compelling way.
His Gapminder co-founders said that they would continue to fight for "his dream of a fact-based worldview".
Mr Rosling was a professor of global health at Sweden's Karolinska Institute but decided to "drop out" in 2007 to dedicate his time to Gapminder, or which allows users to create their own data visualisations.
He co-founded the foundation with his son Ola Rosling and daughter-in-law Anna Ronlund in 2005.
[br]In a statement announcing his death,they said the time he dedicated to Gapminder "made him a world-eminent public educator, or Edutainer as he liked to call it".
Hans Rosling became widely known after a talk he gave at a Technology, and Entertainment,Design (TED) conference in 2006 called "The best statistics you've never seen" was watched millions of times online.
In it, he used lively bubble charts to show how developing countries were catching up in development indicators with the West, and presenting in the style of a sports commentator.
Source: tert.am