More Or Less: Behind The Stats

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 269:55:43
  • More information

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Synopsis

Tim Harford and the More or Less team try to make sense of the statistics which surround us. From BBC Radio 4

Episodes

  • WS More or Less: Coronavirus

    01/02/2020 Duration: 08min

    The WHO have declared a ‘Global Health Emergency’ as health officials are urgently trying to contain the spread of a new coronavirus in China and beyond; but not all the information you read is correct. We fact-check a particularly hyperbolic claim about its spread that’s been doing the rounds on social media.

  • Coronavirus, emotions and guns.

    31/01/2020 Duration: 28min

    Fact checking claims about coronavirus and whether more guns equal fewer homicides.

  • WS More or Less: Dozy Science

    25/01/2020 Duration: 09min

    Anxiety around sleep is widespread. Many of us feel we don’t get enough. An army of experts has sprung up to help, and this week we test some of the claims from one of the most prominent among them: Professor Matthew Walker. He plays ball and answers some of the criticisms of his bestselling book Why We Sleep.

  • Netflix and Chill

    24/01/2020 Duration: 28min

    The list of ways campaigners say we need to change our behaviour in response to climate change seems to grow every week. Now, streaming video is in the frame. We test the claim that watching 30 minutes of Netflix has the same carbon footprint as driving four miles. We hear scepticism about a report that sepsis is responsible for one in five deaths worldwide. Author Bill Bryson stops by with a question about guns – and gets quizzed about a number in his new book. And, how much sleep do we really need? Find out if we need more or less.

  • WS More or Less: Japan’s 99% Conviction Rate

    18/01/2020 Duration: 08min

    The fugitive former Nissan boss, Carlos Ghosn, has raised questions about justice in Japan. The government in Tokyo has defended its system, where 99% of prosecutions lead to conviction. Prof Colin Jones, from Doshisha Law School in Kyoto, explains what's behind this seemingly shocking statistic. And a listener asks if it’s true Canada’s is roughly the same. Toronto lawyer Kim Schofield sets them straight.

  • Weighing the Cost of Brexit

    17/01/2020 Duration: 16min

    Is it possible to calculate the cost of Brexit? Gemma Tetlow from the Institute for Government helps us weigh the arguments. How much does luck play into Liverpool FC's amazing season? And, crucially, how fast is an alligator?

  • WS More or Less: Bushfire mystery

    11/01/2020 Duration: 09min

    Have a billion animals died in Australia’s fires? And which ones are likely to survive?

  • Australian Animal Deaths, Carbon Emissions, Election Mystery

    10/01/2020 Duration: 34min

    Tim Harford on animal deaths in Australia's fires, how many Labour voters went Conservative and are UK carbon emissions really down 40%. Plus: have we really entered a new decade?

  • C-sections and sharks

    04/01/2020 Duration: 08min

    How many women in China give birth in hospitals, and whether it was true that 50% of births there are delivered by caesarean section. Oh, and we also mention guts and bacteria…Sharks kill 12 humans a year but humans kill 11,417 sharks an hour. That’s the statistic used in a Facebook meme that’s doing the rounds. Is it true?

  • Presidential candidates and dementia

    28/12/2019 Duration: 08min

    We talk about the age of some of the frontrunners in the Democrat nomination race and President Donald Trump and the health risks they face.Also, More or Less listeners were surprised by a claim they read on the BBC website recently: “Pets are estimated to be consuming up to 20 percent of all meat globally.” So we – of course – investigated and will explain all.

  • The Simpsons and maths

    20/12/2019 Duration: 08min

    We explore the maths secrets of The Simpsons on their 30th anniversary.

  • Koalas

    13/12/2019 Duration: 08min

    As bushfires rage in Australia, the plight of the koala made front-page news around the world. There were warnings that fires wiped out 80% of the marsupial's habitat and that koalas are facing extinction. We check the claims with the help of National Geographic's Natasha Daly and Dr Christine Hosking of the University of Queensland. (A Koala receives treatment at the Koala Hospital in Port Macquarie after its rescue from a bushfire. Credit: Safeed Khan/Getty Images)

  • Election Special (2/2)

    10/12/2019 Duration: 27min

    Labour's spending plans, Conservatives claims on homelessness, the SNP's education record

  • Tree Planting Pledges

    06/12/2019 Duration: 08min

    The UK General Election is fast approaching, top of the agenda are the political parties green ambitions and one particular initiative is garnering a lot of attention, tree planting. The Labour Party has the most ambitious target – a whopping 2 billion trees planted by 2040. How much land would this take, how does it stack up against other party pledges and what difference will it make? Presenter: Tim Harford Producer: Lizzy McNeill

  • Election Special 1/2

    03/12/2019 Duration: 27min

    50,000 nurses? 40 new hospitals? Big corporate tax rises? Childcare promises? Election pledges might sound good, but do they stand up to scrutiny? In the run up to the General Election on 12th December, Tim Harford takes his scalpel of truth to the inflamed appendix of misinformation. Presenter: Tim Harford Producer: Neal Razzell

  • Testing tomatoes

    29/11/2019 Duration: 08min

    Have these saucy fruits become less healthy over time?

  • The world’s busiest shipping lanes

    23/11/2019 Duration: 09min

    A listener wrote in asking which is the busiest shipping lane in the world. Ruth Alexander tries to find out with sea traffic analyst and former captain, Amrit Singh and Jean Tournadre, a researcher that uses satellite date to ships. Producer: Darin Graham Editor: Richard VadonImage: Freighter ships in Thessaloniki, Greece Credit: Getty Images

  • Bolivia: Can statistics help detect electoral fraud?

    15/11/2019 Duration: 11min

    Evo Morales, Bolivia’s longest-serving leader and first indigenous president, stepped down last week amid weeks of protests sparked by a dispute over a recent presidential election in the country. His opponents say the election was rigged but the embattled former president said it was a cunning coup. We take a closer look at the election results and ask if statistics can tell whether it was fair or fraudulent.Dr Calla Hummel of the University of Miami and Professor Romulo Chumacero of the University of Chile join Ruth Alexander to discuss.

  • Reducing your risk of death

    09/11/2019 Duration: 08min

    Two statistics about reducing your risk of an early death made headlines around the world recently. The first seems to be a great reason to add a four-legged friend to your life. It suggests that owning a dog is tied to lowering your chance of dying early by nearly a quarter. The second statistic claims that even a minimal amount of running is linked to reducing your risk of premature death by up to 30%. Ruth Alexander finds out what’s behind these numbers and we hear from epidemiologist, Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz.Producer: Darin Graham

  • Unbelievable: The forgotten rape data

    01/11/2019 Duration: 08min

    In the United States, some police jurisdictions didn’t send off DNA evidence from people who were raped for testing in a crime lab and for uploading into a national criminal database. Instead, the sets of evidence, known as rape kits, were sat on shelves and in warehouses. It’s estimated that hundreds of thousands need processing. In this edition, Ruth Alexander explores how some jurisdictions are testing the kits now and using the data to catch criminals. Producer: Darin Graham Presenter: Ruth Alexander(Untested sexual assault kits on warehouse shelves. Image: courtesy Joyful Heart Foundation)

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