作者nfsong (图书馆我来了)
看板PCSH91_305
标题How Do You Measure a Crowd?
时间Thu Sep 2 19:58:51 2010
http://www.slate.com/id/2265622/?from=rss
How Do You Measure a Crowd?Disagreements over the Glenn Beck rally in
Washington, D.C.
By Juliet LapidosPosted Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2010, at 9:35 AM ET
According to CBS News, Glenn Beck's rally in Washington, D.C. on Saturday
attracted about 87,000 people. Beck himself put the number at more than
500,000. Other sources, like NBC News, had it somewhere in between. In an
"Explainer" column from last year and reprinted below, Juliet Lapidos
described how experts come up with these estimates.
People gather at the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall to 'Restore
America,' led by conservative icons including talk show host Glenn Beck.
Click image to expand.Glenn Beck's "Restoring Honor" rallyVast crowds filled
the National Mall on Tuesday to watch Barack Obama take the oath of office.
Official figures have not yet been released, but there's widespread
speculation that yesterday's event broke the attendance record set by the 1.2
million people who supposedly showed up at Lyndon B. Johnson's inauguration.
The Associated Press estimated Tuesday's assembled masses at "more than 1
million," the Washington Post projected 1.8 million, and CBS reported
"between 1.8 million and 2 million." How do you measure a crowd?
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Basic arithmetic. Estimates depend on three variables: the area of the
available space, the proportion of the space that's occupied, and the crowd's
density. While the first measurement is objective, and the second fairly
easily determined with aerial photography, the third is a little trickier.
It's customary to assume that in a very crowded place (like a commuter train
during peak hours) people occupy 2.5 square feet, whereas in a looser
gathering each person takes up more like 5 square feet.
This area-based method dates back to the late 1960s. After rowdy students
gathered at Berkeley's Sproul Hall Plaza in December 1966 as part of the Free
Speech Movement, police estimated a crowd of 7,000 to 10,000. Newspapers
repeated the range, but readers were skeptical. Then Herbert A. Jacobs, a
Berkeley professor, tried to arrive at a more exact figure using an enlarged
aerial photograph of the demonstration. He divided the photograph into 1-inch
squares and counted heads using a magnifying glass, eventually reaching a
total estimate of 2,804. So that he wouldn't need to repeat this painstaking
process, he deduced the average square footage taken up by each student—
about 4 square feet at a tightly packed outdoor event—and confirmed this
estimate at subsequent rallies.
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Thanks to advances in aerial digital photography and computer
image-processing, it's now possible to get a fairly exact head count—without
a magnifying glass. As Farouk El-Baz of Boston University explained in a 2003
Wired article, the best way to obtain an accurate image is to fly over the
assembly at peak time and take a digital photograph (resolution 1 foot per
pixel) from 2,000 feet or less. Using satellite images, an Arizona State
University professor calculated that about 800,000 people attended the
inauguration Tuesday—considerably fewer than the AP estimate (based on
photographs and comparison with past events) and less than half the
Washington Post number (based primarily on security agencies on the ground).
The National Park Service announced prior to the inauguration that they
would, eventually, release official attendance figures—which is unusual. In
1995, there was a public disagreement between the Park Police and Louis
Farrakhan over the Million Man March. The Park Police, using pictures taken
from a helicopter, gauged the crowd at 400,000, whereas Farrakhan insisted
more than 1 million were in attendance, and he threatened to sue. Shortly
thereafter, Congress told the Park Service to stop issuing estimates.
Got a question about today's news? Ask the Explainer.
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