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Fighting Statistical Illiteracy

Archive for October 5th, 2009

AP Creates Bogus Crime Wave

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On Sept 30, the AP claimed that 69% of candy-eating kids become criminals.  Like most AP stories, this one appeared in dozens of papers.   The only problem was this claim was false.  Here is the Associated Press (AP) story:

AP: Sept 30 2009.  Study says too much candy could lead to prison

LONDON, England — Willy Wonka would be horrified. Children who eat too much candy may be more likely to be arrested for violent behavior as adults, new research suggests.

British experts studied more than 17,000 children born in 1970 for about four decades. Of the children who ate candies or chocolates daily at age 10, 69 percent were later arrested for a violent offense by the age of 34. Of those who didn’t have any violent clashes, 42 percent ate sweets daily.

The AP single-handedly upped the violent crime rate for candy-eating kids from 0.8% in reality to 69% in their story.  The  AP has unleashed the tsunami of all crime waves.

This 69% bogus statistic was carried by MSNBCCBS News, Fox News, Forbes, Google and Yahoo.

The AP statement is false and wildly so.  Look at the numbers:
*  Of the 17,000 children in the project, 6,942 fit this study.
*  Of these 6,942 kids, 2,924 (42%) had candy daily at age 10.
*  Of the 2,924 kids, 23 (0.8%) had violence convictions by age 34

Note the difference:  0.8% of candy-eaters arrested in the actual data vs. 69% of candy-eaters arrested in the AP story.   Candy is not good for the teeth, but it hardly seems adequate to cause 69% of sweet-eating kids to become violent offenders by age 34.  Once again statistical illiteracy strikes journalists.

So where did the AP get the 69%?  From the original article.   Here is the relevant piece:

Results: Overall, 69% of respondents who were violent by the age of 34 years reported that they ate confectionary nearly every day during childhood, compared with 42% who were non-violent.

Confectionary consumption in childhood and adult violence by Moore et al, The British Journal of Psychiatry, 2009 195: 366-367

The AP took the 69% ratio and switched part and whole.  Compare the whole in the journal article with that in the AP story:
* Journal: respondents who were violent by the age of 34 years
* AP:  children who ate candies or chocolates daily at age 10
The AP is guilty of confusing the inverse: P(A|B) = P(B|A).

If you need more detail, the journal article included this:
“The binary outcome variable, violence, is a rare event (0.47%)”  “Observations n = 6,942.”  Combining their results gives this table:

2009SweetsViolenceTable1

Q1.  Should the AP retract their bad statistic?
Q2. Would most readers understand the difference?

Written by schield

October 5th, 2009 at 2:28 pm

Posted in Ratios