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| Lexis Diagram× | Preston-Coale Method× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo | Demografia | Demografia |
| Famiglia | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Anno di origine≠ | 1875 | 1982 |
| Ideatore≠ | Wilhelm Lexis | Samuel H. Preston & Ansley J. Coale |
| Tipo≠ | Geometric bookkeeping device for demographic events on the age, period, and cohort axes | Death distribution method that reconstructs a population from its deaths to estimate registration completeness |
| Fonte seminale≠ | Preston, S. H., Heuveline, P., & Guillot, M. (2001). Demography: Measuring and Modeling Population Processes. Blackwell. ISBN: 9781557864512 | Preston, S. H., & Coale, A. J. (1982). Age structure, growth, attrition, and accession: a new synthesis. Population Index, 48(2), 217–259. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Lexis surface, Age-period-cohort diagram, Lexis grid, Lexis Diyagramı | Synthetic extinct generations method, SEG method, Preston-Coale death distribution method, Preston-Coale Yöntemi |
| Correlati | 4 | 4 |
| Sintesi≠ | The Lexis diagram is a geometric bookkeeping device that places every demographic event in a two-dimensional grid of age against calendar time, so that each person's life traces a diagonal line and each cohort fans out as a band of parallel lifelines. Named after the German statistician Wilhelm Lexis, it is the foundational drawing of formal demography: it makes the otherwise confusing relationship between age, period, and birth cohort visible, and it tells the analyst exactly which deaths, births, and person-years belong together when a rate is computed. | The Preston-Coale method, also called the synthetic extinct generations method, estimates the completeness of death registration by rebuilding a population from the very deaths it records. Introduced by Samuel Preston and Ansley Coale in 1982, it uses the variable-r relations of a non-stable population to project each age group's future deaths forward, growth-adjust them, and accumulate them into the number of people who must currently be alive at each age. Comparing this implied population with the observed census count reveals what fraction of deaths the vital system actually captures. |
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