The Weighted Average Illusion: Biases in Perceived Mean Position in Scatterplots

08/09/2021
by   Matt-Heun Hong, et al.
0

Scatterplots can encode a third dimension by using additional channels like size or color (e.g. bubble charts). We explore a potential misinterpretation of trivariate scatterplots, which we call the weighted average illusion, where locations of larger and darker points are given more weight toward x- and y-mean estimates. This systematic bias is sensitive to a designer's choice of size or lightness ranges mapped onto the data. In this paper, we quantify this bias against varying size/lightness ranges and data correlations. We discuss possible explanations for its cause by measuring attention given to individual data points using a vision science technique called the centroid method. Our work illustrates how ensemble processing mechanisms and mental shortcuts can significantly distort visual summaries of data, and can lead to misconceptions like the demonstrated weighted average illusion.

READ FULL TEXT

page 2

page 5

research
07/31/2019

Biased Average Position Estimates in Line and Bar Graphs: Underestimation, Overestimation, and Perceptual Pull

In visual depictions of data, position (i.e., the vertical height of a l...
research
04/20/2022

Epistemic Uncertainty-Weighted Loss for Visual Bias Mitigation

Deep neural networks are highly susceptible to learning biases in visual...
research
01/30/2022

Debiased-CAM to mitigate systematic error with faithful visual explanations of machine learning

Model explanations such as saliency maps can improve user trust in AI by...
research
05/07/2023

The Role of Scaling and Estimating the Degree Ratio in the Network Scale-up Method

The Network Scale-up Method (NSUM) uses social networks and answers to "...
research
02/16/2023

Frequency-domain Learning for Volumetric-based 3D Data Perception

Frequency-domain learning draws attention due to its superior tradeoff b...
research
08/07/2017

Why adaptively collected data have negative bias and how to correct for it

From scientific experiments to online A/B testing, the previously observ...
research
07/04/2018

Centrality-Friendship Paradoxes: When Our Friends Are More Important Than Us

The friendship paradox states that, on average, our friends have more fr...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset