Thanks, Eric,

If you do look at the genderized names, the ratio of female to male is about 39% to 61%, which isn't far off the numbers that Roslyn got on her survey. (42% to 58%, if I recall) That does mean that we have to assume that the folks who didn't include a name are as likely to be male as female, but I think this may be more than just pure coincidence.

kc

On 1/29/13 1:28 PM, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
On Jan 29, 2013, at 10:21 AM, Eric Lease Morgan <[email protected]> wrote:

This service uses Freebase to determine the gender of names, and offers a
JSON API: http://genderednames.freebaseapps.com/
Using the API and for a good time, I plan to extract the first names of 
subscribers from the Code4Lib mailing list and generate a pie chart 
illustrating the proportion of males to females. Sort of like digital 
humanities?

I have done a bit of "genderizing" of names against the Code4Lib mailing list, and the 
results (I think) are rather inconclusive. Yes, most of the names are male, but fully one third of 
the names are "ungenderizable". See the blog posting -- http://bit.ly/WNp764

--
Eric Lease Morgan

--
Karen Coyle
[email protected] http://kcoyle.net
ph: 1-510-540-7596
m: 1-510-435-8234
skype: kcoylenet

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