Mapping migration regions and their evolution from population-scale family trees: what can they tell us about cultural identities and regions today?

Caglar Koylu, M. Torkashvand, Hoeyun Kwon, A. Kasakoff
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Abstract

Using a population-scale family tree dataset, this paper proposes a study of migration regions and their evolution in the U.S. between 1789 and 1924. To extract migration events, we use the child ladder approach, which traces family moves based on changes in birthplaces of consecutive children in each individual family. We calculate a time series measure of migration rate and partition the time into optimal periods so that each period has a distinct migration network. We apply community detection to derive migration regions from each network of different periods. We map these regions and use a pair-counting measure to statistically compare the similarity of regions in consecutive time periods. Migration regions reveal the extent to which the strong regional identities we see today, and, in the past, which were rooted in migration. The North/South divide was pervasive not only in the early periods but throughout U.S. history. Migration regions are important for understanding the development of regional and national cultural forms such as music, literature, foodways, and dialects, as well as political divisions and events.
从人口规模的家谱绘制移民地区及其演变:它们能告诉我们今天的文化身份和地区吗?
本文利用人口规模的家谱数据,对1789年至1924年间美国的移民地区及其演变进行了研究。为了提取迁移事件,我们使用了儿童阶梯方法,该方法根据每个家庭中连续孩子的出生地变化来跟踪家庭迁移。我们计算了迁移率的时间序列度量,并将时间划分为最优周期,以便每个周期都有一个不同的迁移网络。我们使用社区检测从不同时期的每个网络中得到迁移区域。我们绘制了这些区域,并使用配对计数方法来统计比较连续时间段内区域的相似性。移民地区揭示了我们今天看到的强烈的地区特征,以及过去植根于移民的地区特征的程度。南北分歧不仅在早期普遍存在,而且贯穿美国历史。移民地区对于理解地区和国家文化形式(如音乐、文学、饮食方式和方言)以及政治分歧和事件的发展非常重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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