this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2024
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[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 months ago (7 children)

With 8 billion people alive I refuse to believe there is any statistical difference between days of the year. For example according to this infographic my birthday is one of the most common but the days before and after are not?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (4 children)

Here is a more believable chart, covering 62,187,024 US births (2000-2014) based on Social Security Administration's data. The scale is not completely arbitrary on this one.

Meanwhile, the post's chart actual Reddit OOP is u/plotset, an account made to shill PlotSet.com, a data visualization software.
They had this to say about the data:

This data represents 4,153,303 US-born babies only between 2000 and 2014.

Top 10 Most Common: Sep 12 (0.307%) Sep 19 (0.306%), Sep 20 (0.302%), Dec 19 (0.300%), Sep 10 (0.300%), Dec 20 (0.299%),Sep 18 (0.299%), Aug 8 (0.299%), Sep 26 (0.299%), Sep 17 (0.298%)

Top 10 Least Common: Dec 25 (0.155%), Jan 1 (0.186%), Dec 24 (0.193%), Jul 4 (0.212%), Jan 2 (0.231%), Dec 26 (0.238%), Nov 23 (0.238%), Nov 25 (0.240%), Nov 27 (0.241%), Nov 24 (0.241%)

Data Source: Kaggle.com/datasets/ayessa/birthday

Tools: PlotSet.com

Note that the "4,153,303" figure is bullshit. It is close to births per year but does not actually correspond to the sum in any of the 15 years, nor the average.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 months ago

This absolutely varies by country/culture, not drastically, but you will see different patterns

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