Of course people are taking his analysis way too seriously. He's attempted to soften his message and the conclusion of the analysis multiple times and has been remarkably kind in doing so considering how people are treating him.
Thank YOU, mweb08! You truly seem to "get it" what I'm trying to say and how I've tried to not be offensive, condescending, or insulting -- and yet anyone who disagrees with me whines that they are being insulted. Sorry, but that's usually a sign that you "may be" losing an argument. Thank you also, Echobeast and dublinlion, for your kind, supportive words.
Once again, the only problem I (and I think many people) have with ANyhuis' analysis is that he views it as being objective, when it is not. If it wasn't the case, then why would I even criticize his posts since everyone has the right to think a zoo is better than another. Since it is not, I take that his analysis is "supposedly" objective and reply to his posts as such.
Sorry that I can't be clearer on this, but there really is a statistical principle that if you accumulate a large enough number of subjective rank statistics, the accumulation becomes "sort of" objective. No, I am NOT claiming our analysis results are purely objective, but they are objective enough to satisfy us, which is why at least the 3 of us are convinced that San Diego is a deserving #1 and Bronx is a deserving #5. You should know that, going into this analysis, one of the 3 of us had the exact same views as many of you, believing that Bronx is clearly better than San Diego. But after seeing the results of our analysis, he changed his mind.
Here's one way to look at it: The 3 of us evaluated 28 factors at the 5 zoos, for a total of 84 rankings for each zoo. If we just look at San Diego and Bronx, we ranked SD>Bronx in 69 out of those 84 ratings, or 82% of the time. If this percent was closer to 60%, it wouldn't be so convincing, but at 82%, you have to believe that all 3 of us must have been determined to rank San Diego ahead of the Bronx in a very biased way. If you truly believe that about us, well then I'd ask you, now who's being insulting?
When you want to concentrate on the admitted fact that the ratings originated from only 3 of us, recall that I invited any of you to join us, and I'll send you a ballot. (Of course you have to have been to all 5 of these zoos, and pledge to rate honestly.) I've received no takers on this so far.
One last point though, as other have pointed out, ranking zoos just by using what you THINK is better for regular visitors is definitely not a good way to do it. Even regular people's opinion are different, you seem to take them all as the same people that enjoy the same animals when it is not at all.
NOT. AT. ALL. The whole point of our use of 28 categories is recognizing how very, very different zoo visitors are. Some love big animals like elephants and giraffes, some love birds, and some (especially young boys) love reptiles. Some like rides and shows, and some don't. Our basis for deciding what regular visitors like comes from observing zoo visitors and their behavior at over 400 zoos worldwide.
The thing is, that opinion then shapes the categories you choose which essentially decides what kind of zoo comes out on top. Your bias is very clear: you think that a zoo like Nuremburg which is heavily focused on large Mammals is 'very complete', whereas a zoo like Walsrode which is (even more) heavily focused on Birds is 'not a real complete zoo'. That 'classist' attitude is going to ensure that you will meet a fair amount of opposition on ZooChat. Your opinion isn't in alignment with most zoonerds,
While you may not have intended on it, this is very insulting. In the world of statistics, "bias" is the dirtiest of dirty words. All statisticians work hard to set up studies that are unbiased, and when bias appears, to address that bias. While I'm not claiming our analysis was totally objective, I am confident in saying our analysis was 100% unbiased. We had no goal we were looking for in our results, and indeed, we were somewhat surprised by those results.
In writing two travel guidebooks about zoos, an early decision had to be made (by me and by my publishers) as to what we should include as "zoos". Are the Sea World parks zoos? Is Busch Gardens? Is the Audubon Insectarium in New Orleans? How about aquariums? In both of my books, we decided that our books would only cover regular zoos, that is facilities which display a variety of animals, and thus not aquariums, not aviaries (Pittsburgh, Utah), and not oceanarium parks. "These", we decided, "are a different animal". Thus, our analysis was set up with these regular zoos in mind, and thus it is not friendly to specialized zoos, which frankly are much more common over in Europe (Walsrode, Apenheul, Parc des Felins) than here in the USA. So this is not a "classist" attitude, it's a decision made by me and my publishers, so that our books would appeal to the widest possible audience. And honestly, I'm very happy to be appealing more to regular zoo visitors than to the ZooChat audience.
Rating a zoo based on the casual zoo visitor's perceptions is probably the absolute worst way you could judge a zoo... They don't care about the animals, they don't care about the welfare, they don't care about conservation, they don't care about captive breeding, they don't care about the history, they don't care about the enclosures, and they don't care about the collection. The casual zoo visitor wants the select few animals they want to see presented directly in front of them for their entertainment.
Now who sounds haughty? We glorified members of ZooChat are the only ones who know what is best for the animals! Zoo visitors don't care about the animals -- yikes, you sound like PETA! Actually, aren't you the one who's told us how much the Bronx Zoo visitors care about conservation? My observation has been that most zoo visitors care a LOT about the animals and, as long as you don't "preach" at them, they care a lot about conservation. Most visitors I've seen are not happy if the favorite animal in front of them looks unhealthy or abused, and almost all zoo visitors want to see more baby animals!
Again, I can't help but see the bias here. You place species like Giant Panda, Koala, Tasmanian Devil as being worth more "points" than others.
Try looking at zoo billboards and other forms of zoo advertising.