A toothpaste brand claims their product will destroy more plaque than any product ever made.


How to Spot a Misleading Graph
A toothpaste brand claims their product will destroy more plaque than any product ever made.
A politician tells you their plan will create the most jobs.
We're so used to hearing these kinds of exaggerations in advertising and politics,
that we might not even bat an eye.
But what about when the claim is accompanied by a graph?
After all, a graph isn't an opinion. It represents cold hard numbers, and who can argue with those?
Yet, as it turns out, there are plenty of ways graphs can mislead and outright manipulate.
Here are some things to look out for.
In this 1992 ad, Chevy claimed to make the most reliable trucks in America, using this graph.
Not only does it show that 98 % of all Chevy trucks sold in the last ten years are still on the road, but
it looks like they're twice as dependable as Toyota trucks.
That is, until you take a closer look at the numbers on the left,
and see that the figure for Toyota is about 96. 5 %.
The scale only goes between 95 and 100 %. If it went from to 100, it would look like this.
This is one of the most common ways graphs misrepresent data : by distorting the scale.
Zooming in on a small portion of the Y axis exaggerates a barely detectable difference
between the things being compared.
And it's especially misleading with bar graphs, since we assume the difference in the size of the bars
is proportional to the values.
But the scale can also be distorted along the X axis, usually in line graphs showing something changing over time.
This chart showing the rise in American unemployment from 2008 to 2010
manipulates the X axis in two ways.
First of all, the scale is inconsistent,
compressing the 15 month span after March 2009 to look shorter than the preceding 6 months.
Using more consistent data points gives a different picture, with job losses tapering off by the end of 2009.
And if you wonder why they were increasing in the first place,
the timeline starts immediately after the US 's biggest financial collapse since the Great Depression.
These techniques are known as " cherry picking ".
A time range can be carefully chosen to exclude the impact of a major event right outside it.
And picking specific data points can hide important changes in between.
Even when there's nothing wrong with the graph itself,
leaving out relevant data can give a misleading impression.
A toothpaste brand claims their product will destroy more plaque than any product ever made.
A politician tells you their plan will create the most jobs.
We're so used to hearing these kinds of exaggerations in advertising and politics,
that we might not even bat an eye.
But what about when the claim is accompanied by a graph?
After all, a graph isn't an opinion. It represents cold hard numbers, and who can argue with those?
Yet, as it turns out, there are plenty of ways graphs can mislead and outright manipulate.
Here are some things to look out for.
In this 1992 ad, Chevy claimed to make the most reliable trucks in America, using this graph.
Not only does it show that 98 % of all Chevy trucks sold in the last ten years are still on the road, but
it looks like they're twice as dependable as Toyota trucks.
That is, until you take a closer look at the numbers on the left,
and see that the figure for Toyota is about 96. 5 %.
The scale only goes between 95 and 100 %. If it went from to 100, it would look like this.
This is one of the most common ways graphs misrepresent data : by distorting the scale.
Zooming in on a small portion of the Y axis exaggerates a barely detectable difference
between the things being compared.
And it's especially misleading with bar graphs, since we assume the difference in the size of the bars
is proportional to the values.
But the scale can also be distorted along the X axis, usually in line graphs showing something changing over time.
This chart showing the rise in American unemployment from 2008 to 2010
manipulates the X axis in two ways.
First of all, the scale is inconsistent,
compressing the 15 month span after March 2009 to look shorter than the preceding 6 months.
Using more consistent data points gives a different picture, with job losses tapering off by the end of 2009.
And if you wonder why they were increasing in the first place,
the timeline starts immediately after the US 's biggest financial collapse since the Great Depression.
These techniques are known as " cherry picking ".
A time range can be carefully chosen to exclude the impact of a major event right outside it.
And picking specific data points can hide important changes in between.
Even when there's nothing wrong with the graph itself,
leaving out relevant data can give a misleading impression.
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