April 27, 2011
Good talk on risk
This is a new TED talk on risk, it’s got some great stuff in it, including:
Common biases in risk perception:
- Exaggerate spectacular and rare risks and downplay common risks (flying vs driving)
- The unknown is perceived to be riskier than the familiar (kidnapping of children by strangers vs family members)
- Personified risks are seen to be greater than anonymous risks (Bin Laden is scarier because he has a name)
- Underestimating risks in situations people control, overestimating risks in situations people don’t control (Skydiving or smoking vs terrorism)
He also discusses the availability heuristic with examples:
“Newspapers repeat again and again rare risks. If it’s in the news, don’t worry about it because by definition news is something that almost never happens. When something is so common it’s no longer news: car crashes, domestic violence, those are the risks you worry about.”
And talks about how we respond to stories more than data.
Rachel Cunliffe is the co-director of CensusAtSchool and currently consults for the Department of Statistics. Her interests include statistical literacy, social media and blogging. See all posts by Rachel Cunliffe »