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Humans by numbers?

Caroline Palmer

Published 24 April 2008

Statistics will never fully explain our behaviour

If, as the eminent neuroscientist and director of the Royal Institution, Susan Greenfield, believes, we are no more nor less than the chemical and electrical activity in our brain, so the super cruncher believes that we are the sum of the resulting, predictable behaviour.

A new book called Super Crunchers, written by a professor at Yale, Ian Ayres, sets out to explain why in all walks of life "traditional experts who base their decisions on experience and in tuition are losing out to a new breed of people - called the super crunchers - who are mining massive datasets with stunning accuracy".

This isn't new. Since long before advertising executives, political pollsters and financial futures were thought of, men and women have been attempting to predict and manipulate events. The tools may have been astrology or diplomacy but the impulse was the same. What is different now is the sheer volume of information that is out there, stored on electronic databases: medical records, criminal records, spending patterns, weather patterns, student attainment.

But is this development a good or a bad thing? Well, it's both. Ayres gives as an example a government programme in Mexico to tackle poverty, which attempted to focus on the children of poor families. This project was developed and monitored using statistics and has had some impressive results.

No one could argue with this kind of use for statistical analysis, but as Mark Twain once famously said (or was it Laurence Peter? The databases can't agree): "Facts are stubborn things but statistics are more pliable."

The subtitle of Ayres's book is How Anything Can Be Predicted. Yet that simply isn't true. Take Ayres's own example of Atai Winkler, a British statistician who used records of the New York Times Bestseller List dating back to 1955 to predict which titles were most likely to become bestsellers. The results weren't perfect. According to Winkler, The Da Vinci Code had only a 36 per cent chance of topping the charts.

It was a comfort to read about such errors. Even the one involving the flawed statistics that helped certain states in the US argue that allowing citizens to carry concealed weapons would reduce gun crime.

The fact is, the reason why ID cards seem such an intrusion, or those personalised letters from the supermarket addressing us by our first name don't wash, is that our value as human beings is immeasurably more than the sum of our spending or voting behaviour. Capitalism encourages us to behave as "individuals" yet analyses us as groups, deskills us with technology and diminishes us with transparent attempts at manipulation. Is it any wonder that religion is becoming more attractive?

"Super Crunchers: How Anything Can Be Predicted" by Ian Ayres is published by John Murray (£16.99)

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1 comment from readers

johannine
28 April 2008 at 10:49

It is well recorded that even a particle when observed changes its 'normal predictive quality'[spin].

Predicting things can either be a self-fullfilling prophecy, or a feel good comforter ,it all depends on filling in the knowns to find the unknown

[oh it could be so simple [why am i seeing dickkk cheeney waffeling about un known knowns and known unknowns [who knows] govt certainly isnt asking the right known [can a known be known yet still be a question?] who knows.

The thing is the known needs to be asked [who asks largly determines the answer [yes sir ] yes men will allways give the ''right reply [ie what the master wants the rep-lie to be ]

But i take things too lightly [the same people get asked [it even boils down to a certain type who condones [fawn ] to answer[and then answer , honestly]

Truelly much money is wasted on absurd things [4 trillion wasted on freeing a people not ready to be ''free'' could well be a case in point[no doudt this important question was asked by the wrong person [off the wrong [yes/men] people. [in truth it was never in dispute ,

[what the govt lobby power brokers demands, on behalf of their multinational task masters , govt delivers [no matter who appears to be running it [govt] at the [any ]given time] the lobby gets as the lobby gets told to get. ,and all govt is only in the can do basket.

Thus we have the need for surety [if only to know when the people plan to revolt] ,this can be done with a believable certainty [they think] by watching what we spend our fiat money on

[little realising our purchases are without rhyme or reason [marketing being such an pure art., what we 'buy' is as random as a coin toss] how often you go to the shop and come back with what you went out to buy?

Any way im not trying to be funny, so stop laughing [they really believe all their black arts are keeping us sated and ignorant [lets let them keep thinking it is so [predictive hah , were only letting you think so]

So stop wasting our tax on survey's and selective opinion polling and deliver service to the little guy govt is supposed to serve and protect ,

[stop being decieved by that multinational wanting to exploit your people into poverty ,you know when the elites hold it all they will them be forced to give some of it back ,better a little today than all of it tomorrow.

ps to see my poll figures [pay up][its pay for vieuw] only the summery is gratis

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