The Mercury News

You think it’s easy to quantify inaugural crowds?

And ditto for massed protesters, spilling over from National Mall to side streets

- By Lisa M. Krieger lkrieger@bayareanew­sgroup.com

It’s what everyone wants to know — but is literally impossible to answer: How many people took to the streets Saturday in the women’s marches against President Donald Trump?

Initial reports in the Associated Press settled for the wildly inconclusi­ve “more than 1 million.” But a project by two professors to sum up the tallies at 680 marches across the country on Monday was pushing estimates as high as 5 million and beyond.

Never before has the size of a crowd been so contentiou­s — yet so darn hard to count.

Crowd counting is an imperfect, laborious and contentiou­s endeavor, ranging from rigorous science to random guesswork. And, as Trump’s weekend fit over the reported size of his inaugurati­on turnout shows, sometimes it’s influenced by politics.

Counting swarms of restless humans is like trying to estimate the size of schools of sardine in the sea or herds of wildebeest­s migrating across the African savanna.

Official Women’s March estimates in some cities, such as Oakland’s 100,000, relied on aerial photos and analytics. Others, such as Santa Cruz’s 10,000, enlisted block-by-block head counts. Walnut Creek used organizers’ estimates to come up with as many as 10,000. San Jose based its 25,000 on comparison­s to similar-sized crowds with reliable counts, like the Turkey Trot. San Francisco police, “for reasons of public safety,” calculate a tally — but do not publicly disclose it.

A lot is at stake: Does a cause have widespread popular support, or not?

University of Connecticu­t professor Jeremy Pressman and University of Denver professor Erica Chenoweth are “crowd sourcing” figures — both high and low estimates — for marches across the world, including 554 in the U.S. As of Monday evening, their tally for U.S. marchers ranged from 3.16 million to 4.68 million. Included are reports of marches where the only source is the marchers themselves — such as 11 marchers in Beaufort, North Carolina.

“Accurately counting things is hard to do. Producing defensible estimates is hard to do,” said Steve Doig, a data journalism expert at Arizona State University, who studies the techniques and challenges of crowd counting. “The only thing you can do is show your work, to show how you did it.”

In controlled environmen­ts, like a sports stadium, it’s easy. “You have turnstiles and tickets sold,” said Doig. “But for things that are impromptu or outdoors, with many entry points and many people milling around, further back ... that’s much harder.”

There are plenty of indirect measures of a crowd: How many people rode subways? How many buses were lined up? How much trash accumulate­d? How many porta-potties were used?

But direct measuremen­ts are far tougher, in sprawling crowds of varying densities. At the Women’s March in Washington, D.C., there were brigades of banner-holders, as well as people in wheelchair­s and strollers. Crowds spilled out into side streets and alleys. Many children saw the march from the shoulders of their parents. And there were pole and tree-climbers, perched high above the National Mall.

At the same time, Trump lashed out at the media for what he insisted were low estimates at his inaugurati­on.

Three times as many people joined Saturday’s march in Washington as President Trump’s inaugurati­on, according to a new density analysis of seven different YouTube video feeds by Professors Keith Still and Marcel Altenburg of Manchester Metropolit­an University in Britain.

The team estimates that at least 470,000 people were on the National Mall for the Women’s March. By comparison, about 160,000 people were in the same area in the hour before Trump’s swearing-in.

A similar 3-to-1 conclusion was reached in a visual comparison of oblique photograph­s by Arizona State’s Doig.

Still pending are the results of a more detailed — and perhaps more accurate — study by a team led by Curt Westergard, aerial photograph­er and president of Digital Design & Imaging Service based in Falls Church, Virginia. Their analysis will be complete by the end of the week.

This team, which has crowd-counted many marches in the mall, used a camera with multiple lenses attached to a tethered balloon, pulled along Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, providing a nearly overhead view of 360-degree images. Their camera captured 2,100 images in four hours. Now, back in the office, they are measuring the density of different parts of the crowd, overlaid on a Google map of topography, and are counting using the same type of automated computer program that counts individual cells in blood specimens.

In some cities, like Los Angeles, estimates can vary by orders of magnitude. Organizers put the number at 750,000. The Los Angeles Police Department said in a statement that “well past” 100,000 people attended but did not provide a more precise number.

Oakland took photos from helicopter­s, then calculated the total based on crowd density and city maps. In a dense crowd, each person takes 2.5 square feet, said Officer Marco Marquez. Their result: 100,000.

The most significan­t count is in Washington, D.C. But that’s also the most challengin­g: There are no nearby tall buildings, due to height restrictio­ns; the mall is a “no fly zone,” so aircraft or drones can’t get images from directly overhead, and the federal government won’t provide estimates. And the weather was miserable last weekend, with rain and fog reducing visibility.

While imperfect, all of these approaches to crowd calculatio­ns will arrive at a number that is far closer to the truth than that used by participan­ts — or the Trump administra­tion.

“Our goal is not to have a final count,” Westergard said. “It is to give a rough order of magnitude. So if somebody says 100,000 and somebody else says 1 million, we can give some sanity to the picture.”

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? These photos show the crowd on the National Mall at the inaugurati­ons of President Barack Obama, above, on Jan. 20, 2009, and President Donald Trump, below, on Jan.20,2017.
AP PHOTOS These photos show the crowd on the National Mall at the inaugurati­ons of President Barack Obama, above, on Jan. 20, 2009, and President Donald Trump, below, on Jan.20,2017.
 ?? LUCAS JACKSON/POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? With the U.S. Capitol in the background, a crowd overflows onto the National Mall during the Women’s March on Washington on Saturday, the first full day of Donald Trump’s presidency. Trump was critical of the protesters.
LUCAS JACKSON/POOL PHOTO VIA AP With the U.S. Capitol in the background, a crowd overflows onto the National Mall during the Women’s March on Washington on Saturday, the first full day of Donald Trump’s presidency. Trump was critical of the protesters.

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