A new research centre has been set up to challenge the idea that we live in âpost-truthâ societies afraid of âexpertiseâ.
Located in the University of Cambridgeâs Faculty of Mathematics, the is chaired by Sir David Spiegelhalter and develops his earlier work as Winton professor for the public understanding of risk.
Speaking to Times Higher Education on the day Donald Trump was elected president of the US, he admitted that his first reaction was âjust to give upâ in terms of the drive to present evidence-based arguments to the public.
But he added: âNo, we mustnât be so feeble, weâve got to fight back. We should be demanding more carefully presented evidence. Our mission is to try and present balanced evidence.â
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In at least one respect, Sir David expressed a certain sympathy for the ârather jaundiced view of the political establishmentâ revealed by recent events. âWhenever evidence is presented on the radio or on the [BBC Radio 4] Today programme by a politician, itâs presented in a way to try and coerce us," he said.
"In particular, the numbers are always framed and arranged to either look big or small, depending on whether they want to frighten us or reassure us. Numbers are used as arguments, but we know they donât speak for themselves but depend on the way they are framed, the context, the comparators. We are very ill-served in society in the way we as citizens hear about evidence.â
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The Winton Centre, which has been supported by a gift of ÂŁ5 million from charitable foundations linked to investment firm Winton, and which Sir David believes may be âthe first of its kind in the worldâ, is specifically designed to combat this.
It will research and publicise best practice in presenting statistics, engage widely with the media and work with others in improving the communication (and often visualisation) of statistical evidence. It is currently helping to revamp, for example, the National Health Serviceâs which sets out the pros and cons of different treatment options to women diagnosed with breast cancer.
The centre will also, as Sir David puts it, sometimes act as âa rapid-response unitâ, aiming to react within two or three days, when it âcomes across evidence presented with the pretence of informing people but actually trying to manipulate themâ.
Despite these populist times, Sir David cites a indicating that trust in government and experts in Britain is actually increasing. Even in the case of effective but controversial policies such as âusing food vouchers to encourage pregnant women in poor areas to stop smokingâ, which many people dismiss as just ârewarding the fecklessâ, he believes there is evidence the public can be won over âif you can really demonstrate they workâ.
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Around the world, adds the centreâs executive director, former BBC producer Alexandra Freeman, âstatistics are badly abused by those who want to influence our opinions â we want to stop that and put their power back into the hands of individualsâ.
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