Resonosity , 1 month ago Yep, classic fallacy (? Bias?) of consider relative scales/change over absolute. Here are some sources that speak about the difference between the two, and how different interpreters of data can use either or to further an argument: https://dataschool.com/misrepresenting-data/relative-vs-absolute-change/ https://stats.mom.gov.sg/SL/Pages/Absolute-vs-Relative-Change-Pitfalls.aspx https://www.designreview.byu.edu/collections/design-in-data-figures-absolute-versus-relative-scales
Yep, classic fallacy (? Bias?) of consider relative scales/change over absolute.
Here are some sources that speak about the difference between the two, and how different interpreters of data can use either or to further an argument:
https://dataschool.com/misrepresenting-data/relative-vs-absolute-change/
https://stats.mom.gov.sg/SL/Pages/Absolute-vs-Relative-Change-Pitfalls.aspx
https://www.designreview.byu.edu/collections/design-in-data-figures-absolute-versus-relative-scales