Synopsis
Tim Harford and the More or Less team try to make sense of the statistics which surround us. From BBC Radio 4
Episodes
-
Predicting the global population
15/10/2012 Duration: 08minPredicting the global population: does anyone really know what’s going to happen?
-
Predicting the Presidency
08/10/2012 Duration: 09minNate Silver tells us who will win the 2012 US election - and how he knows.
-
Plenty more fish in the sea?
01/10/2012 Duration: 09minOnly 100 cod are left in the North Sea according to newspapers. Is this the most wrong headline in More or Less history?
-
Factchecking America
24/09/2012 Duration: 09minUS Presidential Election factchecked. Is Mitt Romney right to say that 47% of Americans pay no tax? And how many jobs has President Obama really created?
-
Investigating crime statistics
17/09/2012 Duration: 09minRuth Alexander investigates Sweden's high rape rate, and finds out which countries are the surprise leaders of the world kidnap league. Plus, who went home from the London 2012 Games with more medals – Olympians or Paralympians? This programme was first broadcast on the BBC World Service
-
Where are the Paralympics Medals?
10/09/2012 Duration: 09minWhy did the USA top the gold medals league in the Olympics, but not the Paralympics? Ruth Alexander examines the performance numbers of the London 2012 Paralympic Games and discovers which countries are punching above their weight, and which below. And Yan Wong tries to calculate how many opening bars are possible in music. This programme was first broadcast on the BBC World Service.
-
How to explain infinity to a 4-year-old
03/09/2012 Duration: 09min‘What’s the number before infinity?’ asks Claudia, aged 4. We challenge Johnny Ball, legendary British TV presenter, to explain. And in celebration of the voice of Sesame Street’s Count von Count, Jerry Nelson, who’s died aged 78, there’s another chance to hear our 2009 interview with the Count, in which he revealed his favourite number: 34,969. Presented by Ruth Alexander, this programme was first broadcast on the BBC World Service.
-
Are African leaders more likely to die in office?
27/08/2012 Duration: 09minThe Prime Minister of Ethiopia is the fourth African premier to die this year alone. Are African leaders more likely to die in office, than their counterparts elsewhere? Also: does marriage make economic sense?
-
Levelling the statistical playing field
20/08/2012 Duration: 09minGiven that some countries are richer than others, and some have larger populations, what should the Olympic medal tally really have looked like? Also: numbers help us understand the world. But for Daniel Tammet, author of “Thinking in Numbers". They don't just help him to understand the world - but to be a part of it.
-
The great playing field sell off?
17/08/2012 Duration: 27minGiven that some countries are richer than others, and some have larger populations, what should the Olympic medal tally really have looked like? Also: numbers help us understand the world. But for Daniel Tammet, author of “Thinking in Numbers". They don't just help him to understand the world - but to be a part of it.
-
How to lose money - fast!
13/08/2012 Duration: 09minLast week Knight Capital lost a lot of money very quickly. It was the latest chapter in the story of something called ‘high frequency trading’. Investors have always valued being the first with the news. But high frequency trading is different: algorithms execute automatic trades, conducted by computers, at astonishing speeds. We ask: is the rapid growth of high frequency trading progress, or – as some think – a threat to the stability of the entire financial system?
-
How to lose money - fast!
10/08/2012 Duration: 27minLast week Knight Capital lost a lot of money very quickly. It was the latest chapter in the story of something called ‘high frequency trading’. Investors have always valued being the first with the news. But high frequency trading is different: algorithms execute automatic trades, conducted by computers, at astonishing speeds. We ask: is the rapid growth of high frequency trading progress, or – as some think – a threat to the stability of the entire financial system?
-
How extraordinary is Ye Shiwen? WS
04/08/2012 Duration: 09minThere was controversy this week after Ye Shiwen, a young Chinese swimmer, won the 400 metre individual medley in fine style. A US swimming coach called the performance "disturbing", implying that she may have cheated. More or Less investigates the numbers and finds there's no statistical smoking gun.
-
How extraordinary is Ye Shiwen?
03/08/2012 Duration: 27minThere was controversy this week after Ye Shiwen, a young Chinese swimmer, won the 400 metre individual medley in fine style. A US swimming coach called the performance "disturbing", implying that she may have cheated. More or Less investigates the numbers and finds there's no statistical smoking gun.
-
Gun laws and gold medals (WS)
28/07/2012 Duration: 09minLast week's mass-shooting at a cinema in Colorado has - not surprisingly - intensified America's bitter and long-running argument with itself about gun control. The argument is political and highly partisan. But it is also practical: would tighter gun laws actually lead to fewer gun deaths? You might think it's obvious that they would. But it seems the evidence isn't quite that clear. Also: how have Olympians changed in the last century?
-
Gun laws and gold medals
27/07/2012 Duration: 27minLast week's mass-shooting at a cinema in Colorado has - not suprisingly - intensified America's bitter and long-running argument with itself about gun control. The argument is political and highly partisan. But it is also practical: would tighter gun laws actually lead to fewer gun deaths? You might think it's obvious that they would. But it seems the evidence isn't quite that clear. Also: how have Olympians changed in the last century?
-
Has clamping down on drugs made the Tour de France slower? (WS)
21/07/2012 Duration: 09minThe Tour de France, we are told, has finally cleaned up its act and clamped down on the use of performance-enhancing drugs. But if it has, should we expect today’s drug-free riders to be slower than their drug-fuelled forebears? Can statistics tell us whether the Tour de France really is cleaner than it was? Also in the programme: does when you retire influence when you die?
-
Has clamping down on drugs made the Tour de France slower?
20/07/2012 Duration: 27minThe Tour de France, we are told, has finally cleaned up its act and clamped down on the use of performance-enhancing drugs. But if it has, should we expect today’s drug-free riders to be slower than their drug-fuelled forebears? Can statistics tell us whether the Tour de France really is cleaner than it was? Also in the programme: does when you retire influence when you die?
-
Who are the Libor losers?
14/07/2012 Duration: 27minHow much damage did messing with Libor really do to the financial system? And we investigate the claim made by a leading charity that a million British children are "starving".
-
More or Less: Who are the Libor losers? (WS)
14/07/2012 Duration: 09minHow much damage did messing with Libor really do to the financial system? After all, most financial trades are two way bets – and for every winner, there is a loser.