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What is the age/location/appearance of the world’s average person?

Beware of applying averages to people, say our readers who point to Earth’s core and 1940s mannequins in their responses

Large group of people on the move, some shopping, some holding hands, others just walking along.

Who is the average person in the world, and what is their age, location, physical appearance etc.?

Hillary Shaw

Newport, Shropshire, UK

The “average” person in the world today is male, Chinese, around 40, living near the Myanmar border, working in the service sector on $30,000 a year, with two children, living in a large city like Kunming.

However, by the mid-21st century, this person would have had to emigrate to India, maybe take a small pay cut and change sex to remain “average”. The hard bit would be ageing just five years by 2050.

Jeff Dickens

Banchory, Aberdeenshire, UK

Even if we were to identify Joe Average, studies indicate that they would almost certainly not realise their averageness and may forcefully deny it.

“The better-than-average effect means that we all tend to rate our abilities and performance as above average”

When people are asked to rate their own abilities and performance on a whole range of topics and factors, they tend to rate themselves as above average (assuming that is the better place to be perceived to be).

This is so commonly observed by psychologists that it has been named the better-than-average effect. So, good luck with your attempts to wheel Joe out into the spotlight!

Albert Lewis

Toronto, Canada

I can’t help much with age and location, but I have some insight on physical appearance: we are looking for someone with one breast and one testicle.

Frank Leyland

Hereford, UK

Averages can only be applied to numeric values, not anything as ill-defined as a person. The “average location” for all the world’s people would be somewhere deep in Earth’s core.

Pat French

Telford, Shropshire, UK

I would stay away from averages where humans are concerned. Remember that human beings have an average of less than two legs.

David Pitcher

Auckland, New Zealand

If anyone starts looking for an average person, they won’t find them. This was tried in the 1940s, when US newspaper Plain Dealer ran a front-page story with the headline: “Are you Norma, typical woman?”

Norma was a statue on display at the Cleveland 91ɫƬ Museum, supposedly depicting the physique of the average woman. Her dimensions had been devised by gynaecologist Robert Dickison based on measurements of 15,000 young adult women. The newspaper was offering a prize to the real-life woman whose dimensions most closely matched those of Norma. The winner was a woman named Martha Skidmore.

But it turns out that average doesn’t really exist. Not only did Skidmore’s dimensions fail to match nearly half of Norma’s measurements, but almost none of the contestants shared any resemblance with Norma’s physique.

In the 1950s, the realisation that few people match the average dimensions led the for its aircraft. Cockpits designed for the average-sized pilot were the cause of many disasters.

@jeremymarchant

via Twitter

This put me in mind of a remark by stand-up comedian George Carlin: “Think about how stupid the average person is, and then realise that half of them are stupider than that.”

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