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Last week
Cora and I explained how to read a simple stock chart, also
known as a table that displays a line graph. This week, I
promised to bring you some chart problems that often mislead
readers. This information is important if you or your children
use software programs that allow you to display statistical
data as visuals, because it helps to remember that simple
is often best. More importantly, if you and your children
understand how companies (or news feeds) use charts to display
data, the companies that use complicated charts may suddenly
appear unreasonably complicated as well.
The graphics
that companies or news feeds use to display statistical data
can either be clear and meaningful or unnecessarily complicated.
Even well-made graphic displays can mislead readers who don't
know how to interpret them. Below is a short list about problems
to notice when you view or create visual graphs and charts.
Perceptual
Distortions: Drawings that contain distorted visuals illustrates
one of the most common types of misleading information. Say
that you come across a display that shows three hands, and
each hand holds a candy bar. The goal for this chart is to
show readers how the size of the candy bar has shrunk over
the past twenty-five years. In this display, the hands are
all the same size, and they line up vertically along the page.
The first
hand, located at the top, holds the largest candy bar. The
figures printed alongside this hand read, "1980 = 100%." In
other words, the information on this chart is based on the
year 1980, and the candy bar represents a relative size of
100%. The second hand, located below the 1980 hand, has a
slightly smaller candy bar and the figures along the side
of this hand state, "1995 = 60%." The candy bar, then, shrank
40% between 1980 and 1995 (100% - 60% = 40%). The final hand,
which represents 2005, is the lowest hand on this vertical
display. The candy bar in this hand is very small, and the
figures typed in along the side of this hand and its candy
bar state, "2005 = 48%."
The problems
in this particular graph include:
- Visual
distortion makes the smaller candy bar appear even smaller
than the actual size, and the larger candy bar appear even
larger than the actual size. Often, the actual graphic is
smaller than the data shown. For example, the 2005 candy
bar is 48% of the 1980 bar, but the actual drawing may be
less than 25% of the original drawn candy bar.
- The
years are uneven, and this error makes the candy bar appear
to shrink rapidly. Instead of "1980-1995-2005," the years
should show "1980-1985-1990-1995-2000-2005" to illustrate
reasonable and even space between years.
Perceptual
distortion was so common during the late 1800s that German
researchers gave it a name, roughly translated as "the old
goosing up the effect by squaring the eyeball trick."* I call
it, "telling a lie with distorted graphics."
Data
Distortion: We covered this information last week, but
I'll quickly refresh you on the problem. When you look at
stock charts, for instance, and if none of them begin at "0"
along the vertical left-hand side of a chart (where the cost
and volume were listed at the BUYandHOLD charts), then the
information was NOT distorted. However, the information contained
in a chart that doesn't begin with zero and that doesn't end
at "100" (or 100%), may look far less dramatic. This doesn't
mean the information isn't correct, though.
But -
when the information along this left-hand vertical side of
a chart is unevenly spaced, then you have problems. Say the
candy bars and the hands in the example above were removed,
but the data remained. What's left? The years "1980, 1995,
and 2005" would be arranged along the bottom horizontal area
of a chart, and the percentages, "100%, 63%, and 48%" would
be placed along that left-hand vertical side of the chart.
The remedies
to this problem are easier to impart than the problems?the
years need to be spaced evenly, as mentioned in the previous
example. Additionally, the percentages need to begin at "0"
and end at "100" or 100%. Then, the chart would represent
a clearer picture of how that candy bar shrunk over the years.
Percentage
Problems: The New York Times printed a graph in
their 6 October 1999 issue to explain rising costs for public
and private colleges against the rate of increase in these
same costs. The illustration contained two charts, one above
the other. The top chart contained a bar graph, or a graph
that used vertical colored bars to demonstrate changes. The
second table, located directly beneath the first one, contained
two line graphs similar to the ones in the cost charts at
BUYandHOLD.
At first
glance, the lower graph gives the impression that college
costs fell steadily throughout the 1990s. However, a closer
look reveals that the vertical axis showed percentages increases,
so the downward-sloping lines show only that the rate of increase
in college costs decreased, not the actual costs. The actual
costs, shown in the top graph, revealed that the actual costs
rose substantially. Without reference to the actual text in
the body copy, the charts seen alone seem contradictory. This
chart wasn't meant to be misleading, but the way that it was
presented remains confusing.
From the
examples above, then, a reader can look out for image distortion,
data distortion, and percentages used as categories in the
vertical axis, rather than actual figures. Other problems
are also visual. When you see a chart that contains 3D graphics,
drop-shadows, or graphs that show pictures rather than simple
line, bar, or pie charts, then you know that the data may
at least seem distorted. Next week we'll show you (and the
kids) how to create a simple chart. Then, you might wonder
why companies and news feed choose to display distorted data
to their audiences.
Until
Then,
Linda Goin
* Jeffrey
O. Bennett and William L. Briggs, Using and Understanding
Mathematics, a Quantitative Reasoning Approach, 2nd ed
(Boston: Addison Wesley, 2002), 333.
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