Dizziness
Nov 22, 2024
Statista uses side-by-side stacked column charts to show the size of different religious groups in the world:
It's hard to know where to look. It's so colorful and even the middle section is filled in whereas the typical such chart would only show guiding lines.
What's more, the chart includes gridlines, as well as axis labels.
The axis labels compete with the column section labels, the former being cumulative while the latter isn't.
The religious groups are arranged horizontally in two rows at the top while they are stacked up from bottom to top inside the columns.
The overall effect is dizzying.
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The key question this chart purportedly address is the change in the importance of religions over the time frame depicted.
Look at the green sections in the middle of the chart, signifying "Unaffiliated" people. The change between the two time points is 16 vs 13 which is -3 percent.
Where is this -3 percent encoded?
It's in the difference in height between the two green blocks. On this design, that's a calculation readers have to do themselves.
One might take the slope of the guiding line that links the tops of the green blocks as indicative of the change, but it's not. In fact the top guiding line slopes upwards, implying an increase over time. That increase is associated with the cumulative total of the top three religious groups, not the share of the Unaffiliated group.
So, if we use those guiding lines, we have to take the difference of two lines, not just the top line. The line linking the bottoms of the green blocks is also relevant. However, the top and bottom lines will in general not be parallel, so readers have to somehow infer from the parallelogram bounded by the guiding lines and vertical block edges that the change in the Unaffiliated group is 3 percent.
Ouch.
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I generally like to use Bumps charts (also called slopegraphs) to show change across two points in time:
What's sacrificed is the cumulation of percentages. I also am pleased that Christian and Muslim, where the movements are greatest, are found at the top of the chart. (There isn't a need to use so many colors; I just inherited them from the original chart.)
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