Page 1 of 3

Terrible graphs

Posted: Mon Apr 27, 2020 5:40 pm
by Stephanie
This one, via The Conversation, is... something
badgraph.jpg
badgraph.jpg (109.45 KiB) Viewed 8960 times

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Mon Apr 27, 2020 5:47 pm
by Woodchopper
That must have taken a long time.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Mon Apr 27, 2020 6:13 pm
by Bird on a Fire
I think that's quite an effective way of showing the looping effect they're talking about in the article, actually. Though it's certainly not very pretty or intuitive.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Mon Apr 27, 2020 8:30 pm
by jimbob
Bird on a Fire wrote:
Mon Apr 27, 2020 6:13 pm
I think that's quite an effective way of showing the looping effect they're talking about in the article, actually. Though it's certainly not very pretty or intuitive.
It reminds me of a phone conversation with a colleague on my walk last week, when he was wondering what a graph of total cases vs hospital admissions vs deaths would look like.

I don't know if he's actually been plotting that.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue Apr 28, 2020 6:44 am
by jaap
Wouldn't any measurement with regular fluctuations show the same loops?
It's basically plotting a sine wave against its derivative, a cosine wave, which gives you a circle. And the only reason it is like a sine wave is because it's using rolling averages to smooth out the fluctuations so that they are more wave-like.
It doesn't really tell you anything particularly interesting, except may that there are weekly fluctuations due to weekends.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue Apr 28, 2020 8:16 am
by Martin Y
jaap wrote:
Tue Apr 28, 2020 6:44 am
Wouldn't any measurement with regular fluctuations show the same loops?
It's basically plotting a sine wave against its derivative, a cosine wave, which gives you a circle. And the only reason it is like a sine wave is because it's using rolling averages to smooth out the fluctuations so that they are more wave-like.
It doesn't really tell you anything particularly interesting, except may that there are weekly fluctuations due to weekends.
That's a very good point.

I had been staring at it and wondering what useful information could be gleaned at a glance from its bold spirals. The answer appears to be almost none. Thanks.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue Apr 28, 2020 2:03 pm
by Herainestold
It does look cool, though.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue Apr 28, 2020 7:21 pm
by Stephanie
Aww, I feel mean now

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed Apr 29, 2020 2:00 am
by Martin_B
Stephanie wrote:
Tue Apr 28, 2020 7:21 pm
Aww, I feel mean now
Don't feel mean - it's a terrible graph and they should be able to show the information in a less confusing manner

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 5:26 pm
by Allo V Psycho
This came from the White House's Council of economic advisers. On Twitter https://twitter.com/WhiteHouseCEA
They say "To better visualize observed data, we also continually update a curve-fitting exercise to summarize COVID-19's observed trajectory. Particularly with irregular data, curve fitting can improve data visualization. As shown, IHME's mortality curves have matched the data fairly well."

I laughed out loud - did they use 'Add Trend Line' in Excel, and choose a cubic? :lol:

The cubic is the one that predicts zero deaths in 9 days time.

And what kind of curve fitting exercise gives the green line from the black one?

Plus, was that graph really drawn by hand using coloured sharpies, or is there a programme that makes your graphs look more user friendly, by making them more crap? I did think of posting this in Pandemic Jokes, but then, it ain't that funny.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 5:42 pm
by shpalman
Allo V Psycho wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 5:26 pm
This came from the White House's Council of economic advisers. On Twitter https://twitter.com/WhiteHouseCEA
They say "To better visualize observed data, we also continually update a curve-fitting exercise to summarize COVID-19's observed trajectory. Particularly with irregular data, curve fitting can improve data visualization. As shown, IHME's mortality curves have matched the data fairly well."

I laughed out loud - did they use 'Add Trend Line' in Excel, and choose a cubic? :lol:

The cubic is the one that predicts zero deaths in 9 days time.

And what kind of curve fitting exercise gives the green line from the black one?

Plus, was that graph really drawn by hand using coloured sharpies, or is there a programme that makes your graphs look more user friendly, by making them more crap? I did think of posting this in Pandemic Jokes, but then, it ain't that funny.
I think we figured out that the "cubic model" was actually a cubic fit to the log of the data.

https://twitter.com/potatoffel/status/1 ... 09792?s=09

No scientific basis or predictive power whatsoever.

It does seem like the IHME predictions are massively sensitive to the data so might well be overfitting as compared to have a decent prior and/or maximizing the entropy.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 7:52 pm
by bolo
Last time I checked, a cubic goes to +infinity in one direction and -infinity in the other. Even if it's cubic in the logarithm, it can't go to zero in both directions. So if this is a cubic at all, the coefficient of the cubic term must be zero, so really it's a quadratic (in the log) which is ... I'm not sure, is it stupider or just equally stupid?

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 8:29 pm
by basementer
bolo wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 7:52 pm
Last time I checked, a cubic goes to +infinity in one direction and -infinity in the other. Even if it's cubic in the logarithm, it can't go to zero in both directions. So if this is a cubic at all, the coefficient of the cubic term must be zero, so really it's a quadratic (in the log) which is ... I'm not sure, is it stupider or just equally stupid?
I read it as the cubic fit range is only the dashed line, and they've projected it (dotted line) using an unspecified different method because they know the cubic itself generates nonsense. Maybe.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 9:03 pm
by shpalman
bolo wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 7:52 pm
Last time I checked, a cubic goes to +infinity in one direction and -infinity in the other. Even if it's cubic in the logarithm, it can't go to zero in both directions. So if this is a cubic at all, the coefficient of the cubic term must be zero, so really it's a quadratic (in the log) which is ... I'm not sure, is it stupider or just equally stupid?
Well it does look like a Gaussian, which is what you would get if you took the log of the data and fit a quadratic to it (given that the second derivative is negative) and then exponented it back.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 9:14 pm
by jimbob
bolo wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 7:52 pm
Last time I checked, a cubic goes to +infinity in one direction and -infinity in the other. Even if it's cubic in the logarithm, it can't go to zero in both directions. So if this is a cubic at all, the coefficient of the cubic term must be zero, so really it's a quadratic (in the log) which is ... I'm not sure, is it stupider or just equally stupid?
Kevin Hansett talked about the cubic model. And we're discussing someone who has form in economics, with an absolutely barking Laffer curve, which I might dig out later.
[ETA: https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sc ... tting-ever ]
And it only needs to have a turning point at the future zero for a dishonest/incompetent person to then take that zero gradient as all time future.

I don't know which he fails on, but he's certainly not both capable and honest - given his work I'm going for neither.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 06, 2020 11:56 pm
by basementer
jimbob wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 9:14 pm
bolo wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 7:52 pm
Last time I checked, a cubic goes to +infinity in one direction and -infinity in the other. Even if it's cubic in the logarithm, it can't go to zero in both directions. So if this is a cubic at all, the coefficient of the cubic term must be zero, so really it's a quadratic (in the log) which is ... I'm not sure, is it stupider or just equally stupid?
Kevin Hansett talked about the cubic model. And we're discussing someone who has form in economics, with an absolutely barking Laffer curve, which I might dig out later.
[ETA: https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sc ... tting-ever ]
And it only needs to have a turning point at the future zero for a dishonest/incompetent person to then take that zero gradient as all time future.

I don't know which he fails on, but he's certainly not both capable and honest - given his work I'm going for neither.
That Laffer curve is a fib of beauty. Following through the discussions that ensued, I found someone asserting that Norway is plotted in the wrong place: he took the total tax revenues including those coming from oil for the y axis, and plotted them against general corporate tax rate on the x axis But oil revenues in particular were at that time taxed at a much higher rate than that, so apparently Norway should be have been way over at about 52% rather than 28%.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Thu May 07, 2020 5:56 am
by Allo V Psycho
shpalman wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 5:42 pm
Allo V Psycho wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 5:26 pm
This came from the White House's Council of economic advisers. On Twitter https://twitter.com/WhiteHouseCEA
They say "To better visualize observed data, we also continually update a curve-fitting exercise to summarize COVID-19's observed trajectory. Particularly with irregular data, curve fitting can improve data visualization. As shown, IHME's mortality curves have matched the data fairly well."

I laughed out loud - did they use 'Add Trend Line' in Excel, and choose a cubic? :lol:

The cubic is the one that predicts zero deaths in 9 days time.

And what kind of curve fitting exercise gives the green line from the black one?

Plus, was that graph really drawn by hand using coloured sharpies, or is there a programme that makes your graphs look more user friendly, by making them more crap? I did think of posting this in Pandemic Jokes, but then, it ain't that funny.
I think we figured out that the "cubic model" was actually a cubic fit to the log of the data.

https://twitter.com/potatoffel/status/1 ... 09792?s=09

No scientific basis or predictive power whatsoever.

It does seem like the IHME predictions are massively sensitive to the data so might well be overfitting as compared to have a decent prior and/or maximizing the entropy.
That Twitter link led me to this:
https://twitter.com/LevyAntoine/status/ ... 3221677057
Countries are best summarized by their corporate income tax schedule description in the OECD tax database, a thread.

You've probably read it, shpallers, but for the others, trust me. It is funnier than you might think.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Thu May 07, 2020 7:00 am
by Allo V Psycho
OK, I plotted their data as best as I could estimate it (in Excel, of course). Yes, I know I'm sad, but I don't start work till 8, so it is my own personal sadness.

Both log and ln give me a curve, but it's platykurtic compared to theirs: Closest I can get is to plot a cubic on the original data then match a gaussian to part of it.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Thu May 07, 2020 2:40 pm
by dyqik
Allo V Psycho wrote:
Thu May 07, 2020 7:00 am
OK, I plotted their data as best as I could estimate it (in Excel, of course). Yes, I know I'm sad, but I don't start work till 8, so it is my own personal sadness.

Both log and ln give me a curve, but it's platykurtic compared to theirs: Closest I can get is to plot a cubic on the original data then match a gaussian to part of it.
I think you have to pick the end points of the fit and projection carefully.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Sat May 16, 2020 1:16 pm
by Rich Scopie
Allo V Psycho wrote:
Wed May 06, 2020 5:26 pm
Plus, was that graph really drawn by hand using coloured sharpies, or is there a programme that makes your graphs look more user friendly, by making them more crap? I did think of posting this in Pandemic Jokes, but then, it ain't that funny.
It does appear to have been drawn using the graphical equivalent of Comic Sans...

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue May 19, 2020 7:59 am
by Holylol

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue May 19, 2020 5:50 pm
by jimbob
Holylol wrote:
Tue May 19, 2020 7:59 am
A new one:
https://statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu/ ... his-graph/
It would be straightforward to get that in Excel, but you'd need to actually put in effort to get that - by sorting the data in descending order.

It would be very difficult to do that accidentally.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Tue May 19, 2020 6:25 pm
by Bird on a Fire
jimbob wrote:
Tue May 19, 2020 5:50 pm
Holylol wrote:
Tue May 19, 2020 7:59 am
A new one:
https://statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu/ ... his-graph/
It would be straightforward to get that in Excel, but you'd need to actually put in effort to get that - by sorting the data in descending order.

It would be very difficult to do that accidentally.
Although, somebody might make a graph, then sort the cells to look at the data, without realising that the graph would be automatically updated to the new order, and then not check it. Excel doesn't always handle dates well either.

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 20, 2020 9:15 am
by Martin_B
Bird on a Fire wrote:
Tue May 19, 2020 6:25 pm
jimbob wrote:
Tue May 19, 2020 5:50 pm
Holylol wrote:
Tue May 19, 2020 7:59 am
A new one:
https://statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu/ ... his-graph/
It would be straightforward to get that in Excel, but you'd need to actually put in effort to get that - by sorting the data in descending order.

It would be very difficult to do that accidentally.
Although, somebody might make a graph, then sort the cells to look at the data, without realising that the graph would be automatically updated to the new order, and then not check it. Excel doesn't always handle dates well either.
Excel handles dates better than that, though. Again, it would require sorting the data into descending order and then plotting

Re: Terrible graphs

Posted: Wed May 20, 2020 9:17 am
by shpalman
Unless something has recently changed a lot, only one class of charts in Excel is actually an x-y plot.