Highway Safety Agency goes rogue

Junk Charts 2013-04-10

A reader sends me to Adam Obeng, who did the dirty work deconstructing a set of charts by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on his blog. Here's an example of these charts:

Nhtsa_sneaker

Aside from the sneaker chart, they concocted a pop stick, a pencil, a tower of Hanoi, etc. These objects are ones I think should be evaluated as art. Adam gamely tells us that the proportions are totally off, and they are both internally and externally inconsitent.

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I'll add two small points to Adam's post.

First, these charts pass my self-sufficiency test, that is to say, they did not print the entire data set (just one number here) on the page. Alas, given the distortion identified by Adam, not printing the data means everyone is free to create their own data. Herein lies the problem: there is an argument for allowing a small degree of distortion in exchange for "beauty" but these charts without any data have gone too far.

Second, see Adam's last point (the footnote). The original data is something quite convoluted: “3 out of 4 kids are not as secure in the car as they should be because their car seats are not being used correctly.” (How would they know this, I wonder.) This is a statistic about kids while the picture shows a statistic about their parents (or drivers).