USclassifiedDocuments {Ecdat} | R Documentation |
Official Secrecy of the United States Government
Description
Data on classification activity of the United States government.
Fitzpatrick (2013) notes that the dramatic jump
in derivative classification activity
(DerivClassActivity
) that occurred in 2009
coincided with "New guidance issued to include
electronic environment". Apart from the jump in
2009, the DerivClassActivity
tended to
increase by roughly 12 percent per year (with a
standard deviation of the increase in the natural
logarithm of DerivClassActivity
of 0.18).
Usage
data(USclassifiedDocuments)
Format
A dataframe containing :
- year
-
the calendar year
- OCAuthority
-
Number of people in the government designated as Original Classification Authorities for the indicated
year
. - OCActivity
-
Original classification activity for the indicated year: These are the number of documents created with an original classification, i.e., so designated by an official Original Classification Authority.
- TenYearDeclass
-
Percent of
OCActivity
covered by the 10 year declassification rules. - DerivClassActivity
-
Derivative classification activity for the indicated year: These are the number of documents created that claim another document as the authority for classification.
Details
The lag 1 autocorrelation of the first
difference of the logarithms of
DerivClassActivity
through 2008 is
-0.52
. However, because there are only
13 numbers (12 differences), this negative
correlation is not statistically significant.
Source
Fitzpatrick, John P. (2013) Annual Report to the President for 2012, United States Information Security Oversight Office, National Archives and Record Administration, June 20, 2013. Information Security Oversight Office (ISOO) of the National Archives.
Examples
##
## 1. plot DerivClassActivity
##
plot(DerivClassActivity~year, USclassifiedDocuments)
# Exponential growth?
plot(DerivClassActivity~year, USclassifiedDocuments,
log='y')
# A jump in 2009 as discussed by Fitzpatrick (2013).
# Otherwise plausibly a straight line.
##
## 2. First difference?
##
plot(diff(log(DerivClassActivity))~year[-1],
USclassifiedDocuments)
# Jump in 2009 but otherwise on distribution
##
## 3. autocorrelation?
##
sel <- with(USclassifiedDocuments,
(1995 < year) & (year < 2009) )
acf(diff(log(USclassifiedDocuments$
DerivClassActivity[sel])))
# lag 1 autocorrelation = (-0.52).
# However, with only 12 numbers,
# this is not statistically significant.