Monday, April 25, 2022

How can a news web site run by a state officer for a political party call itself a non-partisan platform?


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

That’s easy. Greg Pruett never bothered to update the About page for his Idaho Dispatch (started in June 2020), which begins by stating that:

 

“Idaho Dispatch is a non-partisan platform designed to be your local media ally in Idaho.”

 

But his personal web site has a page dated July 25, 2021 titled Why I joined the Constitution Party of Idaho (as their state Vice Chairman). He obviously now has a partisan spin.

 

On March 26, 2022 at Idaho Dispatch he posted a press release titled Constitution Party of Idaho (CP-Idaho) Proudly Announces Candidates for 2020 Election. It ridiculously opens with the following disclaimer (in green italics):

 

“The following Press Release was sent out by the Constitution Party of Idaho. Note: Press releases sent out by organizations do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of those at the Idaho Dispatch.”

 

The image of a spinning top was adapted from this one at Wikimedia Commons.

 


Saturday, April 23, 2022

Book review of Making Numbers Count by Chip Heath and Karla Starr

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At the beginning of this year, a book by Chip Heath and Karla Starr titled Making Numbers Count appeared. It is subtitled The Art and Science of Communicating Numbers (but should have added Almost Exclusively Just Using Words). I think it is a good but not great book. Toastmasters and others learning to give presentations will find much of it useful.  

 

Publisher’s Weekly had the following brief review:

 

“Stanford business professor Heath (Decisive) and journalist Starr (Can You Learn to Be Lucky?) deliver a mixed collection of tips for making data more easily understood. Based on the premise that human brains can’t easily work with large numbers, the authors provide ways to break down, reframe, and convert them into everyday comparisons or analogies. It’s helpful, for instance, to use concrete objects as size references (‘a deck of cards’ sticks with people more than a three-to-four-oz. portion size); to use culturally relevant comparisons (the Covid-19 pandemic’s six-foot social distancing guideline is illustrated by a hockey stick in Canada and a surfboard in San Diego); and if something is hard to grasp, to convert it (how long it takes to walk somewhere can be easier to interpret than how far away it is). Though the authors write that their tips are aimed at both ‘numbers people’ and ‘non numbers people,’ the text tends to read like a corporate training course, and their somewhat dismissive view of math as incomprehensible and useless in the ‘real world’ will strike many as blatantly wrong. Still, ‘non numbers’ people will find plenty to consider.”

 

Three of their rules are:

 

Rule #1. Simpler is better. Round with enthusiasm.

Rule #2. Concrete is better. Use whole numbers to describe whole objects, not decimals, fractions, or percentages.

Rule #3. Follow the rules but defer to expertise. Rules 1 and 2 may be trumped by expert knowledge.

 

On page 19 they tell this story:

 

“More often than not we don’t even make sense of the complicated number in the first place. Alfred Taubman, former CEO of the A&W restaurant chain and author of Threshold Resistance learned that lesson the hard way when his company tried to introduce a third-pound burger at the same price as the McDonald’s quarter-pounder. More than half the customers thought they were being ripped off. ‘Why should we pay the same amount for less meat?’ they said.

 

The value of the new A&W burger depended on consumers comparing two fractions: 1 / 3 and 1/ 4. But fractions are difficult for everyone, because they’re parts of things as opposed to whole objects. We like to count things, and fractions don’t equal ‘things.’ So, we jump to the closest available whole numbers. 4 is bigger than 3, so we mistakenly infer that a 1/ 4 pounder is a bigger burger than a 1/ 3-pounder.”

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We can use a simple bar chart (made with Excel or PowerPoint) to show graphically that a third-pound (four-twelfths) burger is exactly a third (or one-twelfth) bigger than a quarter-pound (three-twelfths) burger.    

 

On page 25 their example is:

 

“2 out of every 5 people you shake hands with may not have washed their hands between using the toilet and touching your hands.”

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

That fraction also can be illustrated graphically using icons for another comparison, as shown above.  

 

Chapter 6 is titled Convert Abstract Numbers into Concrete Objects. On page 37 they open it with Rear Admiral Grace Hopper’s old example for showing what a microsecond means:

 

“This piece of wire is the distance your signal could have traveled in the microsecond you wasted. It stretches 984 feet, about as long as three football fields.”   

 

But when you look in the Notes at the back of the book, you will find that Hopper later did the comparison with a nanosecond. Now the distance is just 0.984 feet, or 11.8 inches – which you can hold in your hand.  That can be represented with a simple visual aid - a plastic bar cut from a coat hanger. You can hand everyone in the audience a length of thin copper wire to keep as a souvenir from your speech.  I blogged about that back on April 19, 2011 in a post titled Gigahertz, nanoseconds, Grace Hopper, and a plastic coat hanger.

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On page 38 they finally get around to showing their first graphic - comparing tumor sizes with foods as is shown above in a table. They don’t use a graphic again until page 113. That is in Chapter 16, titled Make People Pay Attention by Crystallizing a Pattern, Then Breaking It. Clever words are good, but words and carefully thought-out images can be even better.

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As shown above, the example is of Steve Jobs showing a cross section of thin Sony TZ laptop computer (minimum thickness at front edge, 0.8”), overlaid with his Apple MacBook Air (minimum thickness, 0.16”).    

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are lots of examples displayed (as shown above from page 45) via a pair of boxes: a white one at left with a comparison, and a blue one at right with a better version. Curiously the text above those boxes mistakenly refers to CFLs as being Carbon Fluorescent Light-bulbs rather than Compact Fluorescent Lamps.

 

Chapter 8 is titled Human Scale: Use the Goldilocks Principle to Make Your Numbers Just Right. We need to use comparisons which have a place in our world. Multiplying a number by the U.S. population will result in something impressively huge but almost unfathomable, like 5.7 billion gallons per day. (That’s how much water we use for flushing our toilets). On July 12, 2016 I blogged about How to make statistics understandable.

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In that post I divided the 5.7 billion gallons per day up to produce a per capita number of ~18 gallons, as shown above.

 

To be memorable when you speak, think carefully about your words, but also consider using images.

 


Thursday, April 21, 2022

Free e-book on Advanced Public Speaking from the University of Arkansas

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On December 12, 2017 I blogged about how to Be your own Santa Claus – download free public speaking e-textbooks. There is another 665-page e-book titled Advanced Public Speaking by Lynn Meade, Bill Rogers, Cathy Hollingsworth, Robert Kienzle at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. You can best download the .pdf here (complete with internal links). Advanced Toastmasters may be interested in it as reference material.  


Tuesday, April 19, 2022

How to do a better job of researching medical and health articles


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you are searching for a speech topic, then you might decide look at a current medical or health article. At the McGill Office for Science and Society on April 14, 2022 there is an excellent article by Jonathan Jarry titled Doing Your Own Research a Little Bit Better. It discusses how to look closely at a magazine article and decide how much of it makes sense. His three-take home messages are:

 

1] Figuring out the trustworthiness and relevance of a scientific paper first requires identifying what kind of study it is (if it even is a study), which helps us know if the evidence is likely to be strong or weak.

  

2] There are red flags that should reduce our trust in the evidence presented in a paper, such as the absence of a control group, a very small number of participants, and spotlighting of a positive secondary result when the main outcome the study was designed to look at was negative.

 

3] Evaluating the worth of a paper can be helped by having many scientists look at it, which is why data detectives who spend their spare time denouncing bad papers and websites like PubPeer and Retraction Watch are helpful.

 

On January 13, 2020 I blogged about a study where the main outcome was negative in a post titled Did a clinical trial show the dietary supplement pill Prevagen improves memory? Only when you forget about more than half of their data.

 

You might look for articles at PubMed Central and abstracts at PubMed. On June 29, 2021 I blogged about how Finding a magazine article at PubMed does not mean that the article is any good.

 

You also can look up the lead author (and other authors) at sites like Wikipedia, the Rational Wiki, Quackwatch, and even the Encyclopedia of American Loons to see what red flags their reputations raise. For example, Joseph Mercola shows up in specific pages at Rational Wiki, Quackwatch, and the Encyclopedia of American Loons. There also is a long article by David Gorski at Science-Based Medicine on July 25, 2021 titled Joe Mercola: An antivaccine quack tycoon pivots effortlessly to profit from spreading COVID-19 misinformation.

 

The magnifying glass was adapted from this image by Niabot at Wikimedia Commons

 

UPDATE

On April 25, 2022 David Gorski has an article at Science-Based Medicine titled Scientific review articles as antivaccine disinformation. There he discusses another article titled Innate immune suppression by SARS-Cov-2 mRNA vaccinations: The role of G-quadruplexes, exosomes, and MicroRNAs. The lead author of that article, Stephanie Seneff, has the dubious honor of a web page about her at the Encyclopedia of American Loons.


 

 


Saturday, April 16, 2022

Did Benjamin Franklin really say that? No!


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At a traffic light I wound up right behind a Hayden Beverage delivery truck with a quote on its rear door as shown above:

 

“In WINE there is wisdom, in BEER there is freedom, in WATER there is BACTERIA” – Benjamin Franklin”  

 

But there is a big problem regarding the last word in that quotation. Ben Franklin lived from 1706 to 1790. The word bacteria first showed up in 1864 according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, and in 1867 according to the Oxford English Dictionary. That’s seven decades after Franklin died, so he obviously did not say that. The problem was noted by Matthew Powers in an article at Drink314 on August 13, 2017 titled The Franklin Myth| “Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.”

 


Friday, April 15, 2022

Donald J. Trump’s most laughable recent claim

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In a recent speech former president Trump made a preposterous claim. At the New York Post on April 12, 2022 there is an article by Nila Shakhnazarova titled Donald Trump says he is the ‘most honest human being’ ever created. She quoted him as proclaiming:

 

“…I think I’m the most honest human being, perhaps, that God has ever created”

 

At CNN Politics on April 11, 2022 there is another article by Chris Cilliza titled Donald Trump’s most ridiculous claim - maybe ever. He linked to still another article in the Washington Post on January 24, 2021 titled Trump’s false or misleading claims total 30,573 over 4 years. That’s an average of 20.94 claims a day. On September 1, 2020 I had blogged about how Donald J. Trump lies almost once each hour of the day. In that post I pointed out that most people only lie once or twice a day. Trump lied over ten times more!

 

The cartoon of a laughing man was adapted from one in the upper right corner of page 31 in a 1912 book by Campbell J. Cory, The Cartoonist’s Art, at the Internet Archive.     

 


Thursday, April 14, 2022

Fear of public speaking in female and male students at the University of Karachi


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the March 8, 2018 issue of the Pakistan Journal of Gender Studies there is an article on pages 57 to 70 by Kausar Perveen, Yamna Hasan and Abdur Rahman Aleemi titled Glossophobia: The Fear of Public Speaking in Female and Male Students of University of Karachi. They surveyed convenience samples of 63 females and 63 males, and asked them if they had a High, Moderately High, Moderate, Moderately Low, or Low level for that fear.

 

Percentage results from their Figure 1 are shown above. For females, 20.6% had a High level, 41.3% had a Moderately High level, and 38.1% had a Moderate level. For males, only 6.63% had a High level, 33.3% had a Moderately High level, and 28.6% had a Moderate level, 27.0% had a Moderately Low level, and 4.8% had a Low level. Because of the tiny sample size used, these percentages have a large Margin of Error. I have shown the plus and minus for Moderately High (12.2% for females and 11.6% for males). Typical commercial surveys use a sample size of 1000 to make their margin of error about 3%.  

 

It is possible to also analyze their results via a Fear Score on a scale from 1 to 5, a weighted average calculated from those percentages according to this formula:     

   

Fear Score = [5x(% for High) = 4x(% for Moderately High)

+ 3x(% for Moderate) + 2x(% for Moderately Low) + 1X(% for Low)]/100

 

Fear scores are 3.825 for females and 3.093 for males, so females are 0.732 higher. Back on October 30, 2015 I discussed fear score calculation in a blog post titled According to the 2015 Chapman Survey of American Fears, adults are less than Afraid of federal government Corruption and only Slightly Afraid of Public Speaking.