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Title: Interpolating U.S. Decennial Census Tract Data from as Early as 1970 to 2010: A Longitudinal Tract Database
Citation Type: Journal Article
Publication Year: 2014
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Abstract: Differences in the reporting units of data from diverse sources and changes in units over time are common obstacles to analysis of areal data. We compare common approaches to this problem in the context of changes over time in the boundaries of U.S. census tracts. In every decennial census, many tracts are split, consolidated, or changed in other ways from the previous boundaries to reflect population growth or decline. We examine two interpolation methods to create a bridge between years, one that relies only on areal weighting and another that also introduces population weights. Results demonstrate that these approaches produce substantially different estimates for variables that involve population counts, but they have a high degree of convergence for variables defined as rates or averages. Finally, the article describes the Longitudinal Tract Database (LTDB), through which we are making available public-use tools to implement these methods to create estimates within 2010 tract boundaries for any tract-level data (from the census or other sources) that are available for prior years as early as 1970.
Url: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00330124.2014.905156
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Authors: Stults, Brian, J; Logan , John, R; Xu, Zangwang
Periodical (Full): The Professional Geographer
Issue: 3
Volume: 66
Pages: 412-420
Data Collections: IPUMS USA
Topics: Population Data Science
Countries: United States