People Provided 28 Fascinating Examples Of Popular Statistics That Are Misunderstood The Most
Interview With ExpertStatistics is an interesting branch of science that has often got a bad rap. It teaches us a lot about the world and helps us quantify things really well. Statistics also helps with planning, forecasting, and understanding different facts.
Although it provides many unique insights, people tend to spout numbers without truly understanding the context behind them. These misinterpreted stats can put you on the wrong path completely and change the narrative of a story. Which is exactly what you’ll find in the examples shared in this list.
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That the average lifespan a few hundred years ago was close to 40. That's heavily skewed by child mortality, and if you made it to 10, you were probably going to make it at least to 60.
You're most likely to get in an accident near your home.
Well, obviously that's where statistically most likely to be in terms of frequency. I wonder what the stats would be after adjusting for that.
Election maps where 90% of the state is colored by one party to include vast areas of wilderness and unpopulated regions to skew the perception that their party is much more popular than the other, while conveniently ignoring the fact that most people live in densely populated areas.
These maps are accurate because we elect with an electoral college, not a popular vote. You win by 1 vote in a state, you get the whole block.
A popular saying is that numbers don’t lie. But apparently, people do. It might seem like statistics is a branch of science that should not be argued with. But as it turns out, it is possible for people to exaggerate or misuse certain facts. According to Datapine, “Misleading statistics refers to the misuse of numerical data either intentionally or by error. The results provide deceiving information that creates false narratives around a topic. Misuse of statistics often happens in advertisements, politics, news, media, and others.”
Not only do regular people tell half-truths with stats, but it’s also professionals who sometimes muddy the waters. A shocking survey of scientists found that 33.7% of them had engaged in questionable research practices like changing the results of studies to improve outcomes, subjectively interpreting data, and holding back on certain analytical details.
I've heard a "certain segment" of people who like to cite crime statistics say "there are more black men in prison than in college."
You're comparing approximately a range of 4 to 5 years (college) to a life time (prison).
Also that’s mostly because the justice system is anything but
The number of “border encounters”. It gets touted by the media all the time and people treat it like a measure of illegal border crossings but it’s not.
For one thing, if you drop enforcement to zero, border encounters go to zero too while crossings go up. Similarly, if you have more effective enforcement, the number of encounters goes up.
For another, researchers found that about half of all border encounters were with people who had attempted to cross before and were sent back. So it’s reflective of the number of tries more than the number of people.
Then there’s the fact that it counts asylum seekers, who are crossing entirely legally. In fact, the recent spike in border crossings is largely due to a spike in asylum seekers.
But people treat it like the number itself means something, especially the change in it, but it’s a measure of a combination of things and you can’t draw conclusions about any one of them from that number alone.
Population density. 99% of "OMG LOOK AT THIS MAP AND LOOK WHERE ALL THE BAD THINGS ARE HAPPENING" hot takes are just maps of "Where most people live.".
Well, the point of those maps is also to highlight were high number of "bad things" happening does NOT correlate with "where most people live". This method is an extremely good tracker for large-scale health hazards. If the rate of cancer-related illness is higher in Bumfuck, Alabama than in New York, it's very likely that there is something going on there, such as illegal dumps of dangerous chemicals or harmful industrial activities.
Bored Panda interviewed Professor Jennifer Visser-Rogers, the Vice President for Statistical Research and Consultancy, PHASTAR, to understand a bit more about statistics and why people misuse them. Here’s what she shared: “A statistic on its own is just a number. It’s the context that tells the story, but unfortunately, this can result in a misleading story if the context is inaccurate.”
People also tend to fall prey to the issue of sample sizes. For example, let’s say there’s a survey wherein 60% of the respondents preferred Version A over Version B. Obviously, you’d imagine that Version A was the superior option. If the number of people surveyed were 10,000, that would be a pretty significant sample size to back up the research. But if you found out that the number of people surveyed was only 20, then it would mean that just 12 people preferred Version A. That’s why the context behind the statistic matters.
As a statistician (*pushes glasses up nose*) 89% of statistical facts are thrown around without sufficient context (Me, 2024). Even in academics/literature. Statistics are used all the time to confirm a specific view point/hypothesis with complete disregard for how the information was collected, what it means, and how it relates to the real world.
Phone surveys only include people who answer their phone when unknown numbers call. Mail surveys are only responded to by people conscientious enough to fill out the survey. Most surveys get such low response rates that calling it "representative of the population" is absolutely laughable. Self report surveys are usually skewed by people giving answers they think the org giving the survey wants to hear.
That women almost always get the kids in divorce
This is true, but that’s because 90% of child custody cases are settled on outside of court, meaning the fathers aren’t actually fighting for custody of the kids. When they do they usually do get joint custody so long as the father is a fit parent.
Thing is, up until the middle of the 20th century, it was the other way around. Men automatically got custody of their children in a divorce, absolutely no contest, and had the power to dictate whether or not their ex-wives could see them at all. Even if they were the fathers from hell itself. So many children went to old school-type fathers who were 100% ill-equipped and/or uninterested in doing any parenting, as long as they could stick it to their ex-wives. And yes, I know there are mothers who get custody and do the same things, but at least custody agreements aren’t quite so cut and dried, and the best judges in family courts are hard to fool and really try to make the arrangement as equitable as the family dynamics dictate. Of course, not every judge in every family court is going to be good, and that’s unfortunate for both the children and the ex-partner who would actually be the better parent for the kids to live with.
If there's a name for this phenomenon, let me know, because I see it a lot. Using a statistic backward to be misleading.
A relatively apolitical example: "90% of all women millionaires made their fortune in MLMs!"
Nope. It's that *of people who made a million in MLMs*, 90% of them were women.
I've seen it other places too. Another one floating around is that 75% of lesbian married couples divorce, when it's actually that *of same-sex divorces*, 75% are F/F, in part because more F/F couples marry to begin with.
Jennifer provided an example to explain how people should interpret statistical data. She said: “So, for example, if I tell you that eating bacon every day increases your risk of pancreatic cancer by 20%, that’s quite a shocking figure. But what does that 20% increase even mean? It’s a relative risk, which tells me what the risk is in one group compared to another. But it doesn't tell me anything about what my risk actually is.”
“If I were to tell you that we have a 1 in 80 lifetime risk of pancreatic cancer, that means that out of 400 people who don't eat bacon, we would expect 5 of them to get pancreatic cancer anyway. A 20% increase in this means that if you took 400 people who ate bacon every day, we would expect 6 of them to get pancreatic cancer. So only an extra 1 person in every 400. Which doesn't sound anywhere near as shocking as a 20% increase,” she added.
I’m doing X fad diet (keto, vegan, carnivore, extended fasting, omad, etc) and lost Y lbs in only Z weeks! 🥰🥰🥰
Half of it was water/muscle/poop, soon enough you’re going straight back to your old habits.
speaking as a non-vegan, I don't class vegan as a fad diet. It's not about losing weight. It's about not murdering animals. Ethical choice. Nothing to do with weight/body image.
> urine is sterile
Yeah, while its still in your bladder. Once it hits your urethra its not f*****g sterile anymore.
Pretty much all statistical facts.
as a stats guy te more you work with numbers the more you realise the only person who really has a proper understanding of what they're showing is the person who did the study themselves.
Solid information.. (And as the guy doing the studies himself - I can tell you we don't understand it all either.) :-) True statistic. This is NOT actually "bad"!! The smartest, MOST educated and careful scientists will ALL tell you how VERY much - they do NOT know. It's one of the best ways to tell them apart - the Knowitalls - are the stupidest and most ignorant.
Another fascinating example Jennifer shared illustrated how easily information could be manipulated to make a statistic seem more appealing. In fact, many brands and companies might use this tactic, which is why people should start paying more attention.
She stated, “One of my favorite stories is that Colgate came under fire for one of its advertising campaigns that stated that ‘80% of dentists recommend Colgate.’ It was reported for being misleading and suggesting that this meant dentists recommend Colgate over other brands. But that wasn’t how the data was collected, dentists were told to recommend several toothpaste brands, so it wasn’t that 80% recommended Colgate and 20% recommended other brands,” she added.
More people die from drowning after eating ice cream.
Context is that most people eat ice cream near the sea or at pools on holiday.
“Tons of people heard Kitty Genovese being killed but nobody called 911”
Yeah, because 911 didn’t exist in 1964.
The whole Kitty Genovese story is actually really interesting to look into. Basically the majority of what it is known for is the result of wildly inaccurate reporting by the New York Times. The number of witnesses was greatly exaggerated, and there were calls to the police. No witnesses saw the full end to end attack (plus most had little visibility), and in the initial attack her lung was punctured, meaning she would not be able to scream or yell to any volume, so people had little idea something was still ongoing after the initial noise
An interesting phenomenon in the world of statistics is the Simpsons Paradox (not based on the show). It shows how oversimplification of data can cause people to come to dangerous conclusions and why a healthy bit of skepticism is important. A popular example of this is when UC Berkley feared they would face a lawsuit for gender bias because they admitted fewer female applicants in one year. However, a statistician found that upon dividing the school into departments, there was gender bias in favor of women for 4 out of the 6 departments and no significant gender bias in the remaining 2.
The statistic about you being attacked by a shark in the United States. A lot of times they'll just use the entire population of the country. I'm sorry but if you're in Kansas it's functionally zero percent vs an active surfer/swimmer in the ocean on the coast.
That one is definitely a IYKYK. And I know. Uh, Candygram.
Load More Replies...The more significant statistic is the likelihood of a shark being killed by a human. Worldwide, humans killed about 80 million sharks last year. Also worldwide, 14 humans were killed by sharks in 2023. Humans 80,000,000; sharks 14. Score is a bit lopsided, no?
Conversely, the number of shark attacks in the US last year: 36. The number of ocean drownings: 658. The number of swimmers in the ocean around the US: Tens of millions.
Again- parsing the statement- the author is probably a college sophomore (Latin for "smart a*s) who actually knows nothing about statistics or sharks.
What are the sources of your information? Or are you just making yet more assumptions?
Load More Replies...That one about we using only a fraction of our brain.
the number of idiots I deal with regularly makes me inclined to believe this one. And the 10% that is operational is the brainstem part.
"Chihuahuas attack more people than pitbulls do, but the media only reports it when it'sa pitbull."
I imagine iguanas bite more people than alligators do, but for some reason the media cares more when a gator does it. Maybe because of the amount of damage it can cause.
Apart from sample sizes and people cherry-picking stats, Jennifer also shared that “Another thing that people often get wrong is the difference between percentages and percentage points. If, say, inflation goes from 4% to 9%, this doesn't mean that is has increased by 5%, it has gone up 5 percentage points. It’s a really subtle difference but with completely different meanings. But I get that concepts like this can be really difficult for people to get their heads around.”
“We are bombarded with data and statistics now on a daily basis, so I think it’s really important for us all to have a certain level of critical thought to challenge what we see. If we’re expected to use statistics to make decisions about our day-to-day lives, it’s really important to understand what questions we need to ask to be able to fully understand the context of what we’re being presented with,” she added.
Just about any headline that states "if you eat X you are twice as likely to die from Y." The context is that Y is usually a rare condition such that the case rate goes from 3/100,000 to 6/100,000 people. Yeah, it doubled but so what? The odds are in your favor so if X is your fav food go ahead and enjoy it.
The people who throw out that black individuals are statistically more likely to commit crimes. That may be the case looking at pure numbers, but they also never recognize that the locations these happen in have extremely poor standards of living. Low income necessitates crime, and people know that, yet they gleefully push people into these situations so they can have more for their stats.
You used to see a ton of this from climate deniers - "There has been no warming in the last X years". Where X is however many years it was since 1997, which was an unseasonably warm El Nino year. The trend has been warmer and warmer for decades, but for a long time after 1997 the trend sort of looked flat if you only went back to this one outlier. We might see more of this starting from 2024.
Snow happens so no global warming. Every winter the deniers trot that one out.
With so many examples of statistical manipulation or misunderstanding, it can be tough for people to understand what to actually believe. That’s why Jennifer shared a few questions that we could ask ourselves when faced with a new statistic:
- In what population/country/year was this statistic collected, and how generalizable is it to what I’m interested in?
- Who are the people surveyed to get this statistic, and do they have a vested interest in it?
- What is the uncertainty on any figure that you see?
- What do the numbers even mean?
The current inflation of the U.S, usually disregarding the fact that it's worldwide.
What a lot of people fail to take into consideration is inflation. They don’t realize that the $1/gallon they paid for gas in the early 1980s wasn’t actually cheaper. It just seems so, because of how little a dollar can buy anymore. According to the (US) Bureau of Labor's Inflation Calculator, that $1/gallon gasoline in 1980 is equivalent to $3.77/gallon today. Granted, there are some things that really were cheaper back in the day, such as the price of a started home, and there were some things more expensive back in the day, like making long distance phone calls, but most of the basics have simply just kept up with inflation rates. It’s the average PAYCHECK that has failed to keep up with inflation. The $15/hr minimum wage that one-percenters b***h about and loudly claim it will bankrupt the economy is equivalent to $3.98/hr in 1980. Hell, I turned 20 in 1980, and was making more than $3.98/hr just working at a car rental counter in the local airport—pretty much on par with a retail job, and I could afford to not live at home, as the rent on my first apartment was only $195/month, or $734.39 in 2024 dollars—-not on a tiny one-room studio the size of a closet, but on a relatively roomy one bedroom apartment with a pantry and a screened-in back porch that won”d probably cost well over $1000, and probably a lot more, today because it was located in an old, established, lovely, quiet, SAFE Victorian neighborhood (that’s what I meant about housing prices being way more expensive nowadays). We also didn’t have all the home electronics and cellphones to pay astronomical bills for. The only equivalent was cable TV, and even that was cheap—-and wasn’t full of junk channels no one ever watches.
Stats will only present the facts of the matter, but it is up to us to sift through the data and question the information before us. That’s the only way that we won’t get swept up in baseless assumptions. People are tired of others using stats mindlessly without considering the context, which is why this post got 1.6k upvotes and so many interesting comments. Which misunderstood statistic were you most shocked by in this list? Tell us in the comments, and share any examples that you’ve come across.
You’re part of only the less than 1% that serve in the military. Usually told in speeches at basic training and academy graduations.
That number is true if you look at currently serving vs. total population. But if you consider everyone alive who HAS served in that number, it’s around 7%. If you consider the number of kids who will eventually serve, it’s over 10%. Then if you factor in the number who would choose to but aren’t eligible, the number that would have but couldn’t in the past due to discrimination, it’s probably much higher than that.
But the 1% number gets spouted a lot so veterans get to feel extra special.
(US based statistics only).
The gender pay gap doesn’t take into account hours worked, or different kinds of work. More women just work part time.
When you compare salaries between men and women without children, the difference drops to 3%. Not perfect, but nowhere near the amount people think it is.
That women make 70% percent of what a man makes. People often miss the crucial context that the stat does not compare what jobs people have. When you compare men and women who are in the same job, the 'gender wage gap' practically disappears. (Which makes since cause it is illegal to pay someone less based on their gender).
Statistics is a topic about which I am passionate. I am a research scientist, and statistics are a most critical tool in sifting the bits of truth out the chaos of data. Statistics are now being weaponized. More. Benjamin Disraeli, PM of Great Britain for Queen Victoria- said: "There are 3 kinds of lies: Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics." He was not saying knowledge is bad; but that numbers can be twisted until they lie; and people do that. Long true; but now so common that many of us will automatically ignore any numbers. That is incredibly dangerous. This post on BP is good. Point out the problems. Learn - how to sort out the lies and the liars. And know that your friends' opinions on which is which- may not be enough information.
The post misses out the base rate issue. If you don't know the base incident rate of a phenomenon in society, you can't tell if a percentage hike or a fractional difference in a statistic means anything at all. Moreover, if you don't control for it (ie factor it in), you end up with wildly wrong answers, that can be as much as 25% out or more. For example, in SA, there's a lot of hue and cry about "farmer murders". Purportedly part of the so-called "white genocide" that rightwingers fear. BUT if you look at the stats, the stats are only scary if you compare them to the wrong group (farmers natural death rate). If you compare them to national murder rates, the stats are way less scary. And if you compare them to murder rates in Mitchel's Plain in Cape Town, farmers look positively safe. Soooo what is the base rate for the population, and WHICH population are you comparing to? Whtie people? The whole country? White males? White males over 60? Afrikaners? Etc.
The one that is trotted out again and again is the statistic that men are 'X' number of times more likely to unalive themselves than women. This is used to justify anti-feminism and the victim mentality of some men. It completely ignores the fact that women are 4 times as likely to attempt to unalive themselves as men, but have a lower success rate. It is speculated that this is because men are far more likely to use violent methods, whilst women are more thoughtful of the impact that this has on the person who finds them (and have less access to and experience of guns).
Statistics is a topic about which I am passionate. I am a research scientist, and statistics are a most critical tool in sifting the bits of truth out the chaos of data. Statistics are now being weaponized. More. Benjamin Disraeli, PM of Great Britain for Queen Victoria- said: "There are 3 kinds of lies: Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics." He was not saying knowledge is bad; but that numbers can be twisted until they lie; and people do that. Long true; but now so common that many of us will automatically ignore any numbers. That is incredibly dangerous. This post on BP is good. Point out the problems. Learn - how to sort out the lies and the liars. And know that your friends' opinions on which is which- may not be enough information.
The post misses out the base rate issue. If you don't know the base incident rate of a phenomenon in society, you can't tell if a percentage hike or a fractional difference in a statistic means anything at all. Moreover, if you don't control for it (ie factor it in), you end up with wildly wrong answers, that can be as much as 25% out or more. For example, in SA, there's a lot of hue and cry about "farmer murders". Purportedly part of the so-called "white genocide" that rightwingers fear. BUT if you look at the stats, the stats are only scary if you compare them to the wrong group (farmers natural death rate). If you compare them to national murder rates, the stats are way less scary. And if you compare them to murder rates in Mitchel's Plain in Cape Town, farmers look positively safe. Soooo what is the base rate for the population, and WHICH population are you comparing to? Whtie people? The whole country? White males? White males over 60? Afrikaners? Etc.
The one that is trotted out again and again is the statistic that men are 'X' number of times more likely to unalive themselves than women. This is used to justify anti-feminism and the victim mentality of some men. It completely ignores the fact that women are 4 times as likely to attempt to unalive themselves as men, but have a lower success rate. It is speculated that this is because men are far more likely to use violent methods, whilst women are more thoughtful of the impact that this has on the person who finds them (and have less access to and experience of guns).