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1.6: Now You Love Numbers as Much as You Love the White Sox and Taylor Swift

  • Page ID
    48873
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    The purpose of the number is to aid in communicating our experience of how “it” varies. We are trying to communicate variation in terms of the amount or level of “it” or the type of “it.” The purpose of a number is to organize how everything varies and give it a common frame of reference to aid in communicating our experience of variation to others.

    We love numbers because we need them to give us an understanding of an issue. If you are sick, you go to the doctor and provide three numbers: your temperature, blood pressure, and pulse. These three numbers are the beginning of understanding your health and why you are at the doctor. You go on a date and need three numbers: how much money they make, do they like the White Sox (yes or no), do they like Taylor Swift (yes or no). Those numbers give you a quick impression of your dating experience for the next 10 minutes on that date.

    Notice in the preceding examples how parsimonious the set of numbers is. For the doctor, you only need three numbers. For a date, you only need three numbers. One overlooked art of statistics is parsimony, which distills a complex phenomenon into a succinct set of numbers that gives you a complete understanding of the phenomenon. In statistics and research, parsimony is what you are striving for. This goal starkly contrasts most research and statistical situations I have encountered where researchers want to make variables and analyses of everything. This situation is the “everything, including the kitchen sink” approach, which is not good. It is grasping for straws, and it wastes time. Always strive to keep it simple.


    This page titled 1.6: Now You Love Numbers as Much as You Love the White Sox and Taylor Swift is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.