they are graphs that are misleading
They can be misleading if information is missing or it is inaccurate.
the intervals on the side are different
It could imply that a thicker bar means that particular value was greater, when in fact only the height is important in bar graphs.
Line graphs and Bar graphs
line graphs, bar graphs,and circle
They can be misleading if information is missing or it is inaccurate.
the intervals on the side are different
Don't make graphs misleading!As for the answer: different scales, leaving out points, drawing extra lines with no meaning, confusing labels, ...Most graphs you see online are misleading, few are really good.
At the Department of Crime Statistics in South Africa
Graphs can be misleading by having a break in them, not starting at zero, or go up by a certain nuber and then another number completely (ex:up by 1's and then up by 3's). Commercials for companies usually use misleading graphs to enfluence people to buy their porduct. In other words, they lie to get more customers but don't really lie- they just break up the graph to a certain point.
They usually contain a "break" in the graph, which would be on the left side of the graph.
Visual presentation is a very efficient way of conveying information - whether the information is correct or incorrect - including deliberately misleading. Once accepted, all information is difficult to amend. It is important, therefore, that the correct messages are taken in from graphs.
It could imply that a thicker bar means that particular value was greater, when in fact only the height is important in bar graphs.
Bar graphs and line graphs do not. Straight line, parabolic, and hyperbolic graphs are graphs of an equation.
Bar graphs, line graphs, and pie charts Bar graphs, line graphs, and pie charts
circle graphs add up to 100% , bar and line graphs don't
Line graphs and Bar graphs