Geissler | R Documentation |
Geissler's Data on the Human Sex Ratio
Description
Geissler (1889) published data on the distributions of boys and girls in families in
Saxony, collected for the period 1876-1885. The Geissler
data tabulates
the family composition of 991,958 families by the number of boys and girls
listed in the table supplied by Edwards (1958, Table 1).
Usage
data(Geissler)
Format
A data frame with 90 observations on the following 4 variables. The rows represent the non-NA entries in Edwards' table.
boys
number of boys in the family,
0:12
girls
number of girls in the family,
0:12
size
family size:
boys+girls
Freq
number of families with this sex composition
Details
The data on family composition was available because, on the birth of a child, the parents had to state the sex of all their children on the birth certificate. These family records are not necessarily independent, because a given family may have had several children during this 10 year period, included as multiple records.
Source
Edwards, A. W. F. (1958). An Analysis Of Geissler's Data On The Human Sex Ratio. Annals of Human Genetics, 23, 6-15.
References
Friendly, M. and Meyer, D. (2016). Discrete Data Analysis with R: Visualization and Modeling Techniques for Categorical and Count Data. Boca Raton, FL: Chapman & Hall/CRC. http://ddar.datavis.ca.
Geissler, A. (1889). Beitrage zur Frage des Geschlechts verhaltnisses der Geborenen Z. K. Sachsischen Statistischen Bureaus, 35, n.p.
Lindsey, J. K. & Altham, P. M. E. (1998). Analysis of the human sex ratio by using overdispersion models. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series C (Applied Statistics), 47, 149-157.
See Also
Saxony
, containing the data for families of size 12.
Examples
data(Geissler)
str(Geissler)
# reproduce Saxony data, families of size 12
Saxony12 <- subset(Geissler, size==12, select=c(boys, Freq))
rownames(Saxony12)<-NULL
# make a 1-way table
xtabs(Freq~boys, Saxony12)
# extract data for other family sizes
Saxony11 <- subset(Geissler, size==11, select=c(boys, Freq))
rownames(Saxony11)<-NULL
Saxony10 <- subset(Geissler, size==10, select=c(boys, Freq))
rownames(Saxony10)<-NULL