coldel said:In terms of the charts, because the scale is not starting from zero it exacerbates the differences. Your brain will automatically use the visual of the bars to compare, so if one looks ten times longer than the other, it takes ten times longer to do something. The point of charting is to help display data in a way it is more understandable and comparable, but by cutting the scale they change the comparison.
Here is the first chart on the website showing what looks like significant differences between the brands
Capture.JPG
Here is the actual data fully visualised with a full scale, does that now change your perception of how different the brands performance is
Picture1.png
They do this throughout their entire website. The funny thing is if you put the data into Excel and just auto chart, it replicates exactly what they have on their website. So what they are doing is pumping data in and just copy pasting without understanding firstly WHAT charts are actually for and secondly WHY they are doing what they are doing.
/endrant![]()
One could reasonably argue that the power / skill / capability of humans is to able to differentiate fine levels of detail irrespective of the absolute scale…
To use your logic if we measured everything in degrees Kelvin and used zero as a baseline then my house temperature ranges from 290k to 293k…you’re argument based on scale and a chart whose axis pass through zero is that it is de minimis..however I would contend we perceive those 3 degrees change in 300 quite markedly…
Discuss?

