How to Lie with Statistics: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
congress, dewey +
added wikilink
 
(19 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 11:
| illustrator = [[Irving Geis]]
| cover_artist =
| country = United States
| language = English
| series =
| subject = [[Statistics]]<br/>[[Social science]]
| genre =
| publisher = [[W. W. Norton & Company]]
Line 20:
| english_pub_date =
| media_type = Print
| pages = 142
| isbn = 0-393-31072-8
| dewey = 519311.52
| congress = HA29 .H82 1993
| external_url =https://archive.org/details/howtoliewithstat0000darr
| external_host = [[Internet Archive]]
}}
 
'''''How to Lie with Statistics''''' is a book written by [[Darrell Huff]] in 1954, presenting an introduction to [[statistics]] for the [[general reader]]. Not a statistician, Huff was a journalist who wrote many "how -to" articles as a freelancer.
 
The book is a brief, breezy illustrated volume outlining the [[misuse of statistics]] and errors in the interpretation of statistics, and how these errors may create incorrect conclusions.
 
In the 1960s and 1970s, it became a standard textbook introduction to the subject of statistics for many college students. It has become one of the best-selling statistics books in history, with over one and a half million copies sold in the English-language edition.<ref name="fiftyyears">"Over{{Cite thejournal|title=Darrell lastHuff fiftyand years,Fifty Years of ''How to Lie with Statistics''|author-first has=J. soldMichael more|author-last copies=Steele than| any other statistical text."author-link =J. M.Michael Steele. "[http://www-stat.wharton.upenn|journal=Statistical Science |doi=10.edu1214/~steele/Publications/PDF/TN148.pdf088342305000000205 Darrell|publisher Huff and Fifty Years=[[Institute of ''How to Lie withMathematical Statistics'']. ''Statistical Science'',] |doi-access=free|volume=20 (|issue=3), |date=2005, |pages=205–209.}}</ref> It has also been widely translated.
 
Themes of the book include "[[Correlation does not imply causation]]" and "Using [[random sampling]]"." It also shows how statistical graphs can be used to distort reality,. forFor example, by truncating the bottom of a line or bar chart, so that differences seem larger than they are,. orOr, by representing one-dimensional quantities on a pictogram by two- or three-dimensional objects to compare their sizes, so that the reader forgets that the images do not scale the same way the quantities do.
 
The original edition contained illustrations by artist [[Irving Geis]]. In a UK edition, theseGeis' illustrations were replaced withby cartoons by [[Mel Calman]].
 
==See also==
* ''[[How to Lie with Maps]]''
*[[Lies, damned lies, and statistics]]
 
Line 53 ⟶ 56:
[[Category:1954 non-fiction books]]
[[Category:Statistics books]]
[[Category:Mathematics books]]
[[Category:Misuse of statistics]]