See how the rest of the world lives organized by income Anna Rosling Rnnlund

What images do we see
from the rest of the world?

We see natural disasters,

war, terror.

We see refugees,

and we see horrible diseases.

Right?

We see beautiful beaches,

cute animals,

beautiful nature,

cultural rites and stuff.

And then we’re supposed to make
the connection in our head

and create a worldview out of this.

And how is that possible?

I mean, the world seems so strange.

And I don’t think it is.

I don’t think the world
is that strange, actually.

I’ve got an idea.

So, imagine the world as a street,

where the poorest live on one end
and the richest on the other,

and everyone in the world
lives on this street.

You live there, I live there,

and the neighbors we have
are the ones with the same income.

People that live in the same block as me,

they are from other countries,
other cultures, other religions.

The street might look something like this.

And I was curious.

In Sweden where I live,

I’ve been meeting quite a lot of students.

And I wanted to know,

where would they think
they belong on a street like this?

So we changed these houses into people.

This is the seven billion people
that live in the world.

And just by living in Sweden,
most likely you belong there,

which is the richest group.

But the students, when you ask them,

they think they are in the middle.

And how can you understand the world

when you see all these scary
images from the world,

and you think you live in the middle,
while you’re actually atop?

Not very easy.

So I sent out photographers

to 264 homes in 50 countries –
so far, still counting –

and in each home, the photographers
take the same set of photos.

They take the bed,

the stove,

the toys

and about 135 other things.

So we have 40,000 images
or something at the moment,

and it looks something like this.

Here we see, it says on the top,

“Families in the world by income,”

and we have the street represented
just beneath it, you can see.

And then we see some
of the families we have visited.

We have the poorer to the left,
the richer to the right,

and everybody else in between,
as the concept says.

We can go down and see the different
families we have been to so far.

Here, for instance, we have
a family in Zimbabwe,

one in India, one in Russia,
and one in Mexico, for instance.

So we can go around and look
at the families this way.

But of course, we can choose
if we want to see some certain countries

and compare them,

or regions, or if we want,
to see other things.

So let’s go to the front doors

and see what they look like.

Go here, and this is the world
by front doors, ordered by income.

And we can see the big difference

from India, Philippines, China,
Ukraine, in these examples, for instance.

What if we go into the home?

We can look at beds.

This is what beds can look like.

Doesn’t look like the glossy magazines.

Doesn’t look like
the scary images in the media.

So remember that the students in Sweden,

they thought they were in the middle
of the world income.

So let’s go there.

We zoom in here by filtering
the street to the middle,

like this,

and then I ask the students:

Is this what your bedroom looks like?

And they would actually
not feel very at home.

So we go down and see,
do they feel more at home here?

And they would say,

no, this is not what a Swedish
typical bedroom looks like.

We go up here,

and suddenly, they feel sort of at home.

And we can see here in this image,

we see bedrooms in China, Netherlands,

South Korea, France
and the United States, for instance.

So we can click here.

If we want to know more about the family,
the home in which this bed stands,

we can just click it and go to the family,

and we can see all the images
from that family.

We can go this way, too.

And of course, this is free
for anyone to use.

So just go here, and please
add more images, of course.

My personal favorite that everyone
always tries to make me not show,

I’m going to show you now,
and that’s toilets,

because you’re not really allowed
to look at people’s toilets,

but now we can just do it, right?

So here (Laughter)
we have a lot of toilets.

They look pretty much
as we’re used to, right?

And they are in China, Netherlands,
United States, Nepal and so forth,

Ukraine, France.

And they look pretty similar, right?

But remember, we are in the top.

So what about checking all the toilets?

Now it looks a bit different, doesn’t it?

So this way we can visually browse
through categories of imagery,

using photos as data.

But not everything works as a photo.

Sometimes it’s easier
to understand what people do,

so we also do video snippets
of everyday activities,

such as washing hands, doing laundry,

brushing teeth, and so on.

And I’m going to show you
a short snippet of tooth-brushing,

and we’re going to start at the top.

So we see people brushing their teeth.

Pretty interesting to see

the same type of plastic toothbrush
is being used in all these places

in the same way, right?

Some are more serious than others –

(Laughter)

but still, the toothbrush is there.

And then, coming down to this poorer end,

then we will see people
start using sticks,

and they will sometimes use their finger
to brush their teeth.

So this particular woman in Malawi,

when she brushes her teeth,

she scrapes some mud off from her wall

and she mixes it with water,
and then she’s brushing.

Therefore, in the Dollar Street material,

we have tagged this image

not only as her wall, which it is,

but also as her toothpaste,

because that is also what she uses it for.

So we can say, in the poorer
end of the street,

you will use a stick or your finger,

you come to the middle,
you will start using a toothbrush,

and then you come up to the top,

and you will start using one each.

Pretty nice, not sharing
a toothbrush with your grandma.

And you can also look at some countries.

Here, we have the income
distribution within the US,

most people in the middle.

We have a family we visited
in the richer end, the Howards.

We can see their home here.

And we also visited a family
in the poorer end, down here.

And then what we can do now
is we can do instant comparisons

of things in their homes.

Let’s look in their cutlery drawer.

So, observe the Hadleys:

they have all their cutlery
in a green plastic box.

and they have a few different types
and some of them are plastic,

while the Howards,
they have this wooden drawer

with small wooden compartments in it

and a section for each type of cutlery.

We can add more families,

and we can see kitchen sinks,

or maybe living rooms.

Of course, we can do
the same in other countries.

So we go to China, we pick three families.

we look at their houses,

we can look at their sofas,

we can look at their stoves.

And when you see these stoves,

I think it’s obvious
that it’s a stupid thing

that usually, when we think
about other countries,

we think they have
a certain way of doing things.

But look at these stoves.

Very different, right,

because it depends
on what income level you have,

how you’re going to cook your food.

But the cool thing is when we start
comparing across countries.

So here we have China and the US.

See the big overlap between these two.

So we picked the two homes
we have already seen in these countries,

the Wus and the Howards.

Standing in their bedroom,

pretty hard to tell which one is China
and which one is the US, right?

Both have brown leather sofas,

and they have similar play structures.

Most likely both are made in China,

so, I mean, that’s not very strange –

(Laughter)

but that is similar.

We can of course go down
to the other end of the street,

adding Nigeria.

So let’s compare two homes
in China and Nigeria.

Looking at the family photos,

they do not look like they have
a lot in common, do they?

But start seeing their ceiling.

They have a plastic shield and grass.

They have the same kind of sofa,

they store their grain in similar ways,

they’re going to have fish for dinner,

and they’re boiling their water
in identical ways.

So if we would visit any of these homes,

there’s a huge risk
that we would say we know anything

about the specific way you do things
in China or Nigeria,

while, looking at this,
it’s quite obvious –

this is how you do things
on this income level.

That is what you can see when you go
through the imagery in Dollar Street.

So going back to the figures,

the seven billion people of the world,

now we’re going to do a quick recap.

We’re going to look at comparisons
of things in the poorest group:

beds,

roofs,

cooking.

And observe, in all these comparisons,

their homes are chosen

so they are in completely
different places of the world.

But what we see is pretty identical.

So the poorest billion cooking

would look somewhat
the same in these two places;

you might not have shoes;

eating, if you don’t have a spoon;

storing salt would be similar
whether you’re in Asia or in Africa;

and going to the toilet would be
pretty much the same experience

whether you’re in Nigeria or Nepal.

In the middle, we have
a huge group of five billion,

but here we can see you will have
electric light, most likely;

you will no longer sleep on the floor;

you will store your salt in a container;

you will have more than one spoon;

you will have more than one pen;

the ceiling is no longer
leaking that much;

you will have shoes;

you might have a phone,

toys,

and produce waste.

Coming to our group up here,

similar shoes, Jordan, US.

We have sofas, fruits, hairbrushes,

bookshelves,

toilet paper in Tanzania, Palestine,

hard to distinguish

if we would sit in US, Palestine
or Tanzania from this one.

Vietnam, Kenya:

wardrobes, lamps,
black dogs, floors, soap,

laundry, clocks, computers,

phones, and so on, right?

So we have a lot of similarities
all over the world,

and the images we see in the media,

they show us the world
is a very, very strange place.

But when we look
at the Dollar Street images,

they do not look like that.

So using Dollar Street,

we can use photos as data,

and country stereotypes –

they simply fall apart.

So the person staring back at us
from the other side of the world

actually looks quite a lot like you.

And that implies both a call to action

and a reason for hope.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我们
从世界其他地方看到了什么图像?

我们看到自然灾害、

战争、恐怖。

我们看到难民

,我们看到可怕的疾病。

对?

我们看到美丽的海滩、

可爱的动物、

美丽的大自然、

文化仪式等等。

然后我们
应该在我们的脑海中建立联系,

并以此创建一个世界观。

这怎么可能?

我的意思是,这个世界似乎很奇怪。

我认为不是。 其实

我觉得这个世界没
那么奇怪。

我有一个主意。

所以,把世界想象成一条街

,最穷的人住在一边
,最富有的人住在另一边,

世界上的每个人都
住在这条街上。

你住那里,我住那里

,我们的邻居
都是收入相同的。

和我住在同一个街区的人,

他们来自其他国家、
其他文化、其他宗教。

这条街可能看起来像这样。

我很好奇。

在我居住的瑞典,

我遇到了很多学生。

我想知道,


这样的街道上,他们会认为自己属于哪里?

所以我们把这些房子变成了人。


是生活在世界上的七十亿人。

仅仅住在瑞典,
你很可能属于那里,

这是最富有的群体。

但是学生们,当你问他们时,

他们认为他们处于中间。

当你看到世界上所有这些可怕的图像时,你怎么能理解
这个世界

,你认为你生活在中间,
而你实际上是在上面?

不是很容易。

所以我派出摄影师

到 50 个国家的 264 个家庭——
到目前为止,还在不断增加

——在每个家庭中,摄影师都
拍摄了相同的照片。

他们拿走了床

、炉子

、玩具

和大约 135 件其他东西。

所以我们现在有 40,000 张图像
或其他东西

,它看起来像这样。

在这里,我们看到,它在顶部写着

“世界上的家庭收入”,

而我们
在它的下方有一条街道,你可以看到。

然后我们看到了一些
我们访问过的家庭。 正如这个概念所说,

我们的左边是穷人
,右边是富人,

以及介于两者之间的其他人

我们可以下去看看
到目前为止我们去过的不同家庭。

例如,我们
在津巴布韦有一个家庭,

在印度有一个家庭,在俄罗斯
有一个家庭,在墨西哥有一个家庭。

所以我们可以四处
看看这些家庭。

但是当然,我们可以选择
是否要查看某些国家或地区

并进行比较

,或者如果我们愿意,
可以查看其他内容。

所以让我们去

前门看看它们长什么样。

走到这里,这就是前门的世界
,按收入排序。

例如,在这些例子中,我们可以看到

与印度、菲律宾、中国、
乌克兰的巨大差异。

如果我们进屋怎么办?

我们可以看看床。

这就是床的样子。

看起来不像光面杂志。

看起来不像
媒体上的可怕图像。

所以请记住,瑞典的学生,

他们认为自己
的收入处于世界中间。

所以让我们去那里。

我们通过
将街道过滤到中间来放大这里,

就像这样,

然后我问学生:

这就是你的卧室的样子吗?

他们实际上
不会有宾至如归的感觉。

所以我们下去看看,
他们在这里感觉更自在吗?

他们会说,

不,这不是瑞典
典型卧室的样子。

我们上到这里

,突然间,他们有一种宾至如归的感觉。

我们可以在这张图片中看到,例如,

我们在中国、荷兰、

韩国、法国
和美国看到了卧室。

所以我们可以点击这里。

如果我们想更多地了解
这个家庭,这张床所在的家,

我们可以点击它并进入这个家庭

,我们可以看到
那个家庭的所有图像。

我们也可以走这条路。

当然,
任何人都可以免费使用。

所以就到这里,当然,请
添加更多图像。

我个人最喜欢的,每个人
总是试图让我不显示,

我现在要给你看
,那就是厕所,

因为你真的
不被允许看人们的厕所,

但现在我们可以做到,对吧?

所以在这里(笑声)
我们有很多厕所。

它们
看起来和我们习惯的差不多,对吧?

他们在中国、荷兰、
美国、尼泊尔等地、

乌克兰、法国。

他们看起来很相似,对吧?

但请记住,我们处于领先地位。

那么检查所有的厕所呢?

现在看起来有点不同了,不是吗?

因此,通过这种方式,我们可以使用照片作为数据,直观地
浏览图像类别

但并非所有东西都可以作为照片使用。

有时更
容易理解人们在做什么,

因此我们还会制作
日常活动的视频片段,

例如洗手、洗衣服、

刷牙等。

我将向您展示
一小段刷牙

,我们将从顶部开始。

所以我们看到人们刷牙。

看到

所有这些地方

都以相同的方式使用相同类型的塑料牙刷,这很有趣,对吧?

有些人比其他人更严重——

(笑声)

但牙刷仍然在那里。

然后,下降到这个更穷的一端,

然后我们会看到人们
开始使用棍子

,他们有时会用
手指刷牙。

所以马拉维的这个特别的女人,

当她刷牙时,

她会从墙上刮掉一些泥土

,然后将其与水混合,
然后刷牙。

因此,在美元街的材料中,

我们不仅将这张图片标记

为她的墙,它就是这样,

而且还标记为她的牙膏,

因为这也是她使用它的目的。

所以我们可以说,在街道较穷
的那头,

你会用一根棍子或你的手指,

你到中间,
你会开始用牙刷,

然后你到顶部

,你会开始用牙刷 每个。

很好,不
和你奶奶共用牙刷。

你也可以看看一些国家。

在这里,我们有
美国内部的收入分布,

大多数人在中间。

我们
在更富裕的一端拜访了一个家庭,霍华德一家。

我们可以在这里看到他们的家。

我们还拜访了一个
位于较穷端的家庭,就在这里。

然后我们现在可以做的
是我们可以对

他们家中的东西进行即时比较。

让我们看看他们的餐具抽屉。

所以,观察哈德利一家:

他们所有的餐具都
放在一个绿色的塑料盒里。

他们有几种不同的类型
,其中一些是塑料的,

而霍华德家
则有这个木制抽屉,里面

有小木隔间

,每种餐具都有一个部分。

我们可以增加更多的家庭

,我们可以看到厨房水槽,

或者客厅。

当然,我们也可以
在其他国家做同样的事情。

所以我们去中国,我们选择了三个家庭。

我们看看他们的房子,

我们可以看看他们的沙发,

我们可以看看他们的炉灶。

当你看到这些炉子时,

我认为这很明显
是一件愚蠢的事情

,通常当我们
想到其他国家时,

我们认为他们有
某种做事方式。

但是看看这些炉子。

非常不同,对,

因为这
取决于您的收入水平,

您将如何烹饪食物。

但很酷的事情是当我们开始
比较各国时。

所以这里有中国和美国。

看到这两者之间的巨大重叠。

所以我们选择了
我们已经在这些国家见过的两个家

,Wus 和 Howards。

站在他们的卧室里,

很难分辨哪个是中国
,哪个是美国,对吧?

两者都有棕色真皮沙发,

并且具有相似的游戏结构。

很可能两者都是中国制造的,

所以,我的意思是,这不是很奇怪——

(笑声)

但那是相似的。

我们当然可以
走到街道的另一端,

加入尼日利亚。

所以让我们比较一下
中国和尼日利亚的两个房子。

看看家庭照片,

他们看起来并
没有很多共同点,是吗?

但开始看到他们的天花板。

他们有一个塑料盾牌和草。

他们有同样的沙发

,用同样的方式储存谷物,

晚餐吃鱼,

用同样的方式烧水。

因此,如果我们访问这些家庭中的任何

一个
,我们很有可能会说我们

对你在中国或尼日利亚做事的具体方式一无所知

而看看这个,
很明显——

这就是你做事的方式
在这个收入水平上。

这就是当您
浏览美元街的图像时所看到的。

回到数字,

世界上 70 亿人,

现在我们要快速回顾一下。

我们将比较
最贫困群体中的事物:

床、

屋顶、

烹饪。

并观察,在所有这些比较中,

他们的家被选择,

所以他们在
世界上完全不同的地方。

但我们看到的几乎是一样的。

因此,在这两个地方,最贫穷的十亿烹饪

看起来
有些相同;

你可能没有鞋子;

吃饭,如果你没有勺子;

无论您是在亚洲还是在非洲,储存盐都是相似的; 无论您是在尼日利亚还是尼泊尔

,上厕所
的经历几乎都是一样的

在中间,我们有
五十亿的庞大群体,

但在这里我们可以看到你
很可能会有电灯;

你将不再睡在地板上;

您将把盐存放在容器中;

您将拥有不止一把勺子;

您将拥有不止一支笔;

天花板不再
漏水那么多;

你会有鞋子;

你可能有电话、

玩具

和产生废物。

来到我们这里的小组,

类似的鞋子,乔丹,美国。

我们在坦桑尼亚、巴勒斯坦有沙发、水果、发刷、

书架、

卫生纸,

很难区分

我们是否会坐在美国、巴勒斯坦
或坦桑尼亚。

越南、肯尼亚:

衣柜、灯具、
黑狗、地板、肥皂、

洗衣房、钟表、电脑、

电话等等,对吧?

所以我们在世界各地都有很多相似之处

,我们在媒体上看到的图像,

它们向我们展示了这个世界
是一个非常非常奇怪的地方。

但是当我们
查看美元街的图像时,

它们看起来并不是那样的。

因此,使用美元街,

我们可以使用照片作为数据,

以及国家的刻板印象——

它们只是分崩离析。

所以
从世界的另一端盯着我们看的那个人

其实和你很像。

这既意味着行动的号召,也意味着

希望的理由。

谢谢你。

(掌声)