Disastrous Inferences? The Ecological Fallacy in Disaster and Emergency Management Research

P. Jargowsky
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In research on disaster and emergency management, the limited available data is often summarized at higher levels of aggregation, particularly summaries for geographic areas – sometimes referred to as “ecological data.” Measures of social vulnerability and disaster post-mortems based on such data purporting to measure or explain individual-level phenomena have been criticized as committing an “ecological fallacy” (Beccari 2016; Duneier 2006). Stated briefly, one commits an ecological fallacy if one assumes that relationships observed at an aggregate level imply that the same relationships exist at the individual level. In fact, estimates of causal effects from aggregate data can be wrong both in magnitude and direction (Robinson 1950). This article examines the factors that contribute to incorrect inferences that can arise from the analysis of aggregate data and provides guidance to disaster and emergency management researchers to help them avoid committing ecological fallacies.
灾难性的推论?灾害与应急管理研究中的生态谬误
在灾害和应急管理方面的研究中,往往对有限的现有数据进行更高层次的汇总,特别是对地理区域的汇总——有时被称为"生态数据"。基于这些旨在衡量或解释个人层面现象的数据来衡量社会脆弱性和灾难事后分析的措施被批评为犯下了“生态谬误”(Beccari 2016;杜艾伊尔2006)。简而言之,如果一个人认为在总体水平上观察到的关系意味着在个体水平上也存在同样的关系,那么他就犯了生态谬误。事实上,从总体数据中对因果效应的估计可能在量级和方向上都是错误的(Robinson 1950)。本文考察了导致汇总数据分析可能产生的错误推断的因素,并为灾害和应急管理研究人员提供了指导,以帮助他们避免犯下生态谬误。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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