Shared posts

19 Apr 19:16

How to Lie with Statistics: Stand Your Ground and Gun Deaths

by Lisa Wade, PhD

2At Junk Charts, Kaiser Fung drew my attention to a graph released by Reuters.  It is so deeply misleading that I loathe to expose your eyeballs to it.  So, I offer you this:

1The original figure is on the left.  It counts the number of gun deaths in Florida.  A line rises, bounces a little, reaches a 2nd highest peak labeled “2005, Florida enacted its ‘Stand Your Ground’ law,” and falls precipitously.

What do you see?

Most people see a huge fall-off in the number of gun deaths after Stand Your Ground was passed.  But that’s not what the graph shows.  A quick look at the vertical axis reveals that the gun deaths are counted from top (0) to bottom (800).  The highest peaks are the fewest gun deaths and the lowest ones are the most.  A rise in the line, in other words, reveals a reduction in gun deaths.  The graph on the right — flipped both horizontally and vertically — is more intuitive to most: a rising line reflects a rise in the number of gun deaths and a dropping a drop.

The proper conclusion, then, is that gun deaths skyrocketed after Stand Your Ground was enacted.

This example is a great reminder that we bring our own assumptions to our reading of any illustration of data.  The original graph may have broken convention, making the intuitive read of the image incorrect, but the data is, presumably, sound.  It’s our responsibility, then, to always do our due diligence in absorbing information.  The alternative is to be duped.

Cross-posted at Pacific Standard.

Lisa Wade is a professor of sociology at Occidental College and the co-author of Gender: Ideas, Interactions, Institutions. You can follow her on Twitter and Facebook.

(View original at http://thesocietypages.org/socimages)

25 Oct 23:42

Reverse Identity Theft

Estrella López

THIS IS MY LIFE!!!

I asked a few friends whether they'd had this happen, then looked up the popularity of their initials/names over time.  Based on those numbers, it looks like there must be at least 750,000 people in the US alone who think 'Sure, that's probably my email address' on a regular basis.
12 Sep 02:34

The Worst 9/11 Commemorative Crap Your Money Can Buy

by Kate Dries
Estrella López

Is neverforgetting the only authorized way to spend 9/11?

The Worst 9/11 Commemorative Crap Your Money Can Buy

It seems slightly unfair to all the tacky, patriotic stuff across the United States to draw attention this one national tragedy and our collective desire to "remember" it through obesssive consumer culture. But there's just something about 9/11 that has prompted budding entrepreneurs everywhere to put on their thinking caps and charge money to Their Fellow Americans for objects that are not only not needed on any level but are often also entirely distasteful.

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24 Aug 19:45

Make 20 Cheap, Healthy Meals from Pantry Staples with This Chart

by Melanie Pinola

Make 20 Cheap, Healthy Meals from Pantry Staples with This Chart

This graphic is like a cookbook in flowchart form. With it, you'll learn how to make many different, inexpensive dishes using common pantry essentials such as onions, tomatoes, and beans.

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12 Aug 23:41

WantWorthy Turns the Web Into Your Personal Visual Wishlist

by Eric Ravenscraft

WantWorthy Turns the Web Into Your Personal Visual Wishlist

Most stores you see online have a wishlist feature, but they are all siloed into their own service. WantWorthy gives you one wishlist for everything you could want on the web.

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