How statistics can be misleading - Mark Liddell

1,427,995 views ・ 2016-01-14

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Statistics are persuasive.
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So much so that people, organizations, and whole countries
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base some of their most important decisions on organized data.
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But there's a problem with that.
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Any set of statistics might have something lurking inside it,
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something that can turn the results completely upside down.
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For example, imagine you need to choose between two hospitals
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for an elderly relative's surgery.
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Out of each hospital's last 1000 patient's,
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900 survived at Hospital A,
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while only 800 survived at Hospital B.
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So it looks like Hospital A is the better choice.
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But before you make your decision,
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remember that not all patients arrive at the hospital
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with the same level of health.
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And if we divide each hospital's last 1000 patients
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into those who arrived in good health and those who arrived in poor health,
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the picture starts to look very different.
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Hospital A had only 100 patients who arrived in poor health,
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of which 30 survived.
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But Hospital B had 400, and they were able to save 210.
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So Hospital B is the better choice
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for patients who arrive at hospital in poor health,
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with a survival rate of 52.5%.
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And what if your relative's health is good when she arrives at the hospital?
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Strangely enough, Hospital B is still the better choice,
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with a survival rate of over 98%.
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So how can Hospital A have a better overall survival rate
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if Hospital B has better survival rates for patients in each of the two groups?
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What we've stumbled upon is a case of Simpson's paradox,
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where the same set of data can appear to show opposite trends
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depending on how it's grouped.
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This often occurs when aggregated data hides a conditional variable,
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sometimes known as a lurking variable,
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which is a hidden additional factor that significantly influences results.
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Here, the hidden factor is the relative proportion of patients
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who arrive in good or poor health.
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Simpson's paradox isn't just a hypothetical scenario.
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It pops up from time to time in the real world,
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sometimes in important contexts.
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One study in the UK appeared to show
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that smokers had a higher survival rate than nonsmokers
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over a twenty-year time period.
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That is, until dividing the participants by age group
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showed that the nonsmokers were significantly older on average,
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and thus, more likely to die during the trial period,
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precisely because they were living longer in general.
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Here, the age groups are the lurking variable,
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and are vital to correctly interpret the data.
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In another example,
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an analysis of Florida's death penalty cases
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seemed to reveal no racial disparity in sentencing
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between black and white defendants convicted of murder.
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But dividing the cases by the race of the victim told a different story.
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In either situation,
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black defendants were more likely to be sentenced to death.
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The slightly higher overall sentencing rate for white defendants
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was due to the fact that cases with white victims
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were more likely to elicit a death sentence
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than cases where the victim was black,
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and most murders occurred between people of the same race.
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So how do we avoid falling for the paradox?
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Unfortunately, there's no one-size-fits-all answer.
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Data can be grouped and divided in any number of ways,
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and overall numbers may sometimes give a more accurate picture
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than data divided into misleading or arbitrary categories.
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All we can do is carefully study the actual situations the statistics describe
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and consider whether lurking variables may be present.
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Otherwise, we leave ourselves vulnerable to those who would use data
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to manipulate others and promote their own agendas.
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