### From Publishers Weekly Americans are assaulted by numbers, whether it's the latest political poll or most recent clinical study on caffeine. But what do these numbers really mean and are they communicating a categorical truth? Blastland and Dilnot, from the BBC radio show _More or Less_ , embar
The Numbers Game: The Commonsense Guide to Understanding Numbers in the News, in Politics, and inLife
β Scribed by Blastland, Michael; Dilnot, Andrew
- Book ID
- 106918115
- Publisher
- Gotham
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 192 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 1592404235
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
Americans are assaulted by numbers, whether it's the latest political poll or most recent clinical study on caffeine. But what do these numbers really mean and are they communicating a categorical truth? Blastland and Dilnot, from the BBC radio show More or Less, embark on a monumental task of interpreting numerical data and showing how its misinterpretation often leads to misinformation. It is one thing to measure, they write, quite another to wrench the numbers to a false conclusion. The authors take a close look at statistics that are accepted at face valueβmany stemming from scientific or medical discoveries. They examine everything from the link between alcohol and breast cancer risk to baseball batting averages to fascinating assessments of the manipulation of data by politicians when they talk taxes or the cautionary tale of a U.K. educational measurement program designed much like No Child Left Behind. Blastland and Dilnot apply their famously cheeky approach to the analysis of how people are duped, frightened or falsely encouraged by data. (Jan.)
Copyright Β© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Product Description
The Strunk & White of statistics team up to help the average person navigate the numbers in the news.
Drawing on their hugely popular BBC Radio 4 show More or Less,, journalist Michael Blastland and internationally known economist Andrew Dilnot delight, amuse, and convert American mathphobes by showing how our everyday experiences make sense of numbers.
The radical premise of The Numbers Game is to show how much we already know, and give practical ways to use our knowledge to become cannier consumers of the media. In each concise chapter, the authors take on a different themeβsuch as size, chance, averages, targets, risk, measurement, and dataβand present it as a memorable and entertaining story.
If youβve ever wondered what βaverageβ really means, whether the scare stories about cancer risk should convince you to change your behavior, or whether a story you read in the paper is biased (and how), you need this book. Blastland and Dilnot show how to survive and thrive on the torrent of numbers that pours through everyday life. Itβs the essential guide to every cause you love or hate, and every issue you follow, in the language everyone uses.
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