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- Title
Tracking people over time in 19th century Canada for longitudinal analysis.
- Authors
Antonie, Luiza; Inwood, Kris; Lizotte, Daniel; Andrew Ross, J.
- Abstract
Linking multiple databases to create longitudinal data is an important research problem with multiple applications. Longitudinal data allows analysts to perform studies that would be unfeasible otherwise. We have linked historical census databases to create longitudinal data that allow tracking people over time. These longitudinal data have already been used by social scientists and historians to investigate historical trends and to address questions about society, history and economy, and this comparative, systematic research would not be possible without the linked data. The goal of the linking is to identify the same person in multiple census collections. Data imprecision in historical census data and the lack of unique personal identifiers make this task a challenging one. In this paper we design and employ a record linkage system that incorporates a supervised learning module for classifying pairs of records as matches and non-matches. We show that our system performs large scale linkage producing high quality links and generating sufficient longitudinal data to allow meaningful social science studies. We demonstrate the impact of the longitudinal data through a study of the economic changes in 19th century Canada.
- Subjects
CANADA; DEMOGRAPHIC surveys; DEMOGRAPHIC research; INFORMATION storage &; retrieval systems; ECONOMIC trends
- Publication
Machine Learning, 2014, Vol 95, Issue 1, p129
- ISSN
0885-6125
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10994-013-5421-0