| arbuthnot {openintro} | R Documentation | 
Male and female births in London
Description
Arbuthnot's data describes male and female christenings (births) for London from 1629-1710.
Usage
arbuthnot
Format
A tbl_df with with 82 rows and 3 variables:
- year
- year, ranging from 1629 to 1710 
- boys
- number of male christenings (births) 
- girls
- number of female christenings (births) 
Details
John Arbuthnot (1710) used these time series data to carry out the first known significance test. During every one of the 82 years, there were more male christenings than female christenings. As Arbuthnot wondered, we might also wonder if this could be due to chance, or whether it meant the birth ratio was not actually 1:1.
Source
These data are excerpted from the Arbuthnot dataset in the
HistData package.
Examples
library(ggplot2)
library(tidyr)
# All births
ggplot(arbuthnot, aes(x = year, y = boys + girls, group = 1)) +
  geom_line()
# Boys and girls
arbuthnot |>
  pivot_longer(cols = -year, names_to = "sex", values_to = "n") |>
  ggplot(aes(x = year, y = n, color = sex, group = sex)) +
  geom_line()
[Package openintro version 2.5.0 Index]