Relationships observed for groups do not necessarily hold for individuals, and vice versa. The ecological fallacy is a fallacy in ecological studies that may arise when an investigator makes an inference about an individual based on aggregate data for a group. In ecological studies, we assess the relation between exposure rates and event rates at group level because we know only marginal distributions of exposure (risk factor) and outcome event and not their joint distributions. Researchers have made unwarranted inferences from the association between exposure to risk factor and outcome event among groups (ecological data) to association among individuals within each group without accounting for the possible ecological bias. Aggregating data loses information. The ecological fallacy may arise because the process of aggregating data may ...

  • Loading...
locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Get a 30 day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a variety of sources bringing classroom topics to life
  • Read modern, diverse business cases
  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles