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Historical Nominal Record Linkage/Evidence
Method evidence record

Historical Nominal Record Linkage

Historical nominal record linkage is the task of recognising when records in different sources, two censuses, a census and a draft register, a baptism and a marriage, refer to the same person, even though no shared identifier exists and names are misspelled, ages misreported, and places renamed. Linkage is the engine behind longitudinal historical micro-data: it builds the life-course panels that underpin studies of migration, mobility, mortality, and the long-run effects of early-life conditions. Three families of methods dominate. Deterministic linkage applies hand-crafted rules; the probabilistic Fellegi-Sunter framework weights field agreements and disagreements by their discriminating power; and supervised machine learning, trained on hand-linked examples, learns to classify candidate pairs. Modern historical practice, led by Abramitzky, Boustan, Feigenbaum, and collaborators, emphasises transparent, replicable algorithms and, crucially, explicit measurement of linkage error, since false matches and missed links can bias every downstream estimate.

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Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.

Historical Nominal Record Linkage (Deterministic, Probabilistic, and Machine-Learning)
Taxonomic method record · process-pipeline / historical-demography
  • Abramitzky, R., Boustan, L., Eriksson, K., Feigenbaum, J., & Perez, S. (2021). Automated Linking of Historical Data. Journal of Economic Literature, 59(3), 865-918. · DOI 10.1257/jel.20201599
  • Feigenbaum, J. J. (2016). Automated Census Record Linking: A Machine Learning Approach. Working paper, Boston University. · URL
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Related methods

Generated from the method graph and shown as machine-suggested relations — no evidence claim is inferred.

Same method familyHISCO Occupational Codingmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familyHistorical Social Mobility Tablesmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familyQuantitative Prosopographymachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.

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2 recorded citations, copied from the method source record.

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