Prøve GULL - Gratis
Stats all, folks
New Zealand Listener
|October 25-31, 2025
Our worship of data can skew outcomes in everything from workplace, sport and lifestyle decisions to how countries are run, writes GREG BRUCE.
-
In 2015, I began work as a journalist at The New Zealand Herald. Over the next nine years, the value of my contribution to my employer was increasingly determined by a single data point: the number of people clicking on my articles and then clicking "subscribe to the Herald". Bonuses for me and many of my colleagues were tied specifically to boosting that number and only that number. In one meeting, a respected senior journalist summed up the mood: "I'm sick of being treated like a number." In May this year, I was made redundant. Data, I believed, could go and get fucked.
Having said that, it would be disingenuous not to acknowledge the genesis of this article was, at least in part, based on knowing that the line “how data can skew outcomes” would get a lot of clicks.
LIFE, DEATH & DATA
The ultimate case of real-world, data-driven decision-making landed here in 2020, when Covid-19 turned seemingly everyone into a data scientist overnight. People who had never before thought seriously about using the phrase “regression to the mean” became instant experts in how best to apply the concepts they heard on the news. Meanwhile, real scientists were struggling to figure out what was happening and how to deal with it.
Shaun Hendy, then-director of Te Pūnaha Matatini Centre for Complex Systems and Networks, a national centre of research excellence, was at the heart of modelling the potential spread of the disease. In his first few months working on the response, he says, “We were just absolutely desperate for data”, which he describes as “situation normal’ for scientists.
At the beginning of the pandemic, he was so short of usable data he was transcribing Ashley Bloomfield’s press conferences to get it.
Denne historien er fra October 25-31, 2025-utgaven av New Zealand Listener.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA New Zealand Listener
New Zealand Listener
A touch of class
The New York Times' bestselling author Alison Roman gives family favourites an elegant twist.
6 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Hype machines
Artificial intelligence feels gimmicky on the smartphone, even if it is doing some heavy lifting in the background.
2 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
It's not me, it's you
A CD tragic laments the end of an era.
2 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
High-risk distractions
A river cruise goes horribly wrong; 007's armourer gets his first fieldwork; and an unlikely indigenous pairing.
2 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Magical mouthfuls
These New Zealand rieslings are classy, dry and underpriced.
1 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
This is my stop
Why do people escape to the country? People like us, or people entirely unlike us, do. It is a dream.
3 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Behind the facade
Set in the mid-1970s on Italian film sets, Olivia Laing's complex literary thriller holds contemporary resonances.
3 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Final frontier
With the final season of Stranger Things we may get answers to our many questions.
2 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
Every grain counts
Draining and rinsing canned foods is one of several ways to reduce salt intake.
3 mins
November 22-28, 2025
New Zealand Listener
The bird is singing
An 'ideas book' ponders questions of art and authenticity, performance and the role of irony.
2 mins
November 22-28, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

