A baby by any other name wouldn't be as trendy

0

Naming your child is a big responsibility. For many people, the task involves combing through the Big Book of Baby Names and picking a handful that sound good, and heading into the delivery room with those candidates in mind. (Then again, some folks might just leave it to public opinion.)

But I needed to do more research to make an informed decision -- and, of course, I used SAS. After all, anyone who has read Freakonomics knows that a name can be an indicator of so many other attributes.

Background: The Shame of Being Unoriginal
It started with my first two daughters, Marguerite and Evelyn. We did not apply particular methodology when selecting their names, but our friends noticed something: each name was considered "old-fashioned" and not used much anymore. At least, that was a first impression. However, as the months went by, we noticed that other families that we met had small children with the same names we had picked. We had been part of a trend, completely by accident. In fact, according to the Social Security Administration, "Evelyn" ranks 98th in the top 1000 girls' names of 2002. I never saw that coming.

Analysis to the Rescue
When we were expecting our third daughter in 2005, I decided to devise a litmus test for our preferences. Knowing that we like "old-fashioned" names, but don't want to take part in a "name comeback" trend. In plain language, the question was: what are the names that were popular 80 to 100 years ago but aren't as popular now? Even fancy new web tools like the Baby Name Wizard don't answer that directly.

Here is what I did to find the answer:

1. Coalesced the top 1000 names from each of three decades: 1900-10, 1910-20, and 1920-30. Using SAS Enterprise Guide, I brought that data into SAS. It's about 3000 entries of course (1000 per decade), but really only about 1200 unique girl names.

2. Collected the top 1000 girl names from the most recent year available (2003 at the time), and brought that data into SAS.

3. Joined the two data sources to create a result set that contained only those girl names that appear in the "old names" list but not in the "new names" list. (In query parlance, this was a full outer join of the two tables based on "girl name", where "old girl name" is NULL in the "new girl name" list.)

The result was over 900 names. The next step was clear: pick from one of these 900 names and we'd be original. If other kids started popping up with the same name, we would be the leader, not the follower.

More to Decisions than Analytics
I'll be honest -- there is a reason some of those old names aren't used much anymore (apologies to any "Hilda"s out there reading this). In the end, we settled on "Gwendolyn," a name that sounds old fashioned and yet still sweet to us. It turns out "Gwendolyn" still has some measure of popularity as a girl name -- it ranked 598th out of 1000 in the year 2003 (when 456 little girls were given that name, according to the Social Security numbers).

But at least we walked into that name fully informed. We haven't yet met very many other little Gwendolyns, so perhaps her name will still rank as one of her many outstanding, unique qualities.

Looking Back: How We Did
Taking the data available at the Social Security Administration's "baby names" site and bringing it into SAS Enterprise Guide, I was able to plot the popularity of the names we gave to our three children.

As you can see, we bucked the trend with Marguerite (named after my maternal grandmother). Her name (shown by the red line) drops out of the top 1000 list after 1972. But it appears that Evelyn (the blue line) can expect to encounter many folks who share her first name. With Gwendolyn (the green line), we ended up somewhere in the middle.

Share

About Author

Chris Hemedinger

Director, SAS User Engagement

+Chris Hemedinger is the Director of SAS User Engagement, which includes our SAS Communities and SAS User Groups. Since 1993, Chris has worked for SAS as an author, a software developer, an R&D manager and a consultant. Inexplicably, Chris is still coasting on the limited fame he earned as an author of SAS For Dummies

Comments are closed.

Back to Top