Automating Historical Source Transcription

Author(s)

  • Gunnar Thorvaldsen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs9568

Keywords:

Census, Transcription, Machine learning, Population register

Abstract

Transcribing the 1950 Norwegian census with 3.3 million person records and linking it to the Central Population Register (CPR) provides longitudinal information about significant population groups during the understudied period of the mid-20th century. Since this source is closed to the public, we receive no help from genealogists and rather use machine learning techniques to semi-automate the transcription. First the scanned manuscripts are split into individual cells and multiple names are divided. After the birthdates were transcribed manually in India, a lookup routine searches for families with matching sets of birthdates in the 1960 census and the CPR. After manual checks with GUI routines, the names are copied to the text version of the 1950 census, also storing the links to the CPR. Other fields like occupations or gender contain numeric or letter codes and are transcribed wholesale with routines interpreting the layout of the graphical images. Work employing these methods has also started on the 1930 census, which is the last of the Norwegian censuses to be transcribed.

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Published

2021-03-31

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Thorvaldsen, G. (2021). Automating Historical Source Transcription. Historical Life Course Studies, 10, 59-63. https://doi.org/10.51964/hlcs9568