Showing posts with label StatsChat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label StatsChat. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Relax already

StatsChat's excellent Thomas Lumley featured on Radio Live, poking holes in the doomsayers' balloons. He notes:

  • Reducing the BAC from .08 to .05 is unlikely to be cost-effective relative to other mechanisms to reduce the road toll;
  • The overall road toll is well down;
  • There is no crisis in youth drinking - the numbers are rather going the other way;
  • Youth sexual activity is down too;
  • Crime stats are getting better;
  • People play up the scary numbers.
None of these will be news to loyal readers, but will be news to many Radio Live listeners. I hope more Radio Live listeners flip over to Stats Chat. 

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Bogus polls

Web polls are worse than useless, says Thomas Lumley. Why? Anchoring bias.
Seeing the results is likely to make your beliefs less accurate, even if you know the information content is effectively zero.
It might not be immediately obvious how bogus web polls cause harm. But if anchoring bias feeds into conformity or bandwagon effects, and that cycles into voter policy demands, we can move from bogus poll to "most people think X" to "Policy should be X" to "How can you oppose X, most people agree...". I think similar mechanisms work in bogus "cost of X" studies, eroding some voters' default liberalism by convincing them that they're bearing, through the tax system, costs actually borne by those engaging in the activity.

StatsChat continues in its Sisyphean quest to beat the stupid out of journalistic use of stats in New Zealand. Check the link above for fun and game in margins of error across three web polls. Forfty percent of Kiwis know these stats are bogus; shame it isn't eighnty.