• This record comes from PubMed

The surname space of the Czech Republic: examining population structure by network analysis of spatial co-occurrence of surnames

. 2012 ; 7 (10) : e48568. [epub] 20121031

Language English Country United States Media print-electronic

Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

In the majority of countries, surnames represent a ubiquitous cultural attribute inherited from an individual's ancestors and predominantly only altered through marriage. This paper utilises an innovative method, taken from economics, to offer unprecedented insights into the "surname space" of the Czech Republic. We construct this space as a network based on the pairwise probabilities of co-occurrence of surnames and find that the network representation has clear parallels with various ethno-cultural boundaries in the country. Our inductive approach therefore formalizes a simple assumption that the more frequently the bearers of two surnames concentrate in the same locations the higher the probability that these two surnames can be related (considering ethno-cultural relatedness, common co-ancestry or genetic relatedness, or some other type of relatedness). Using the Czech Republic as a case study this paper offers a fresh perspective on surnames as a quantitative data source and provides a methodology that can be easily incorporated within wider cultural, ethnic, geographic and population genetics studies already utilizing surnames.

See more in PubMed

Longley P, Webber R, Lloyd D (2007) The quantitative analysis of family names: historic migration and the present day neighbourhood structure of Middlesbrough, United Kingdom. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 96: 31–48.

Rodriguez-Larralde A, Scapoli C, Beretta M, Nesti C, Mamolini E, et al. (1998) Isonymy and the genetic structure of Switzerland II. Isolation by distance. Ann Hum Biol 25: 533–540. PubMed

Barrai I, Rodriguez-Larralde A, Mamolini E, Scapoli C (2000) Elements of the surname structure of Austria. Ann Hum Biol 26: 1–15. PubMed

Barrai I, Rodriguez-Larralde A, Manni F, Ruggiero V, Tartari D, et al. (2003) Isolation by language and isolation by distance in Belgium. Ann Hum Genet 68: 1–16. PubMed

Scapoli C, Goebl H, Sobota S, Mamolini E, Rodriguez-Larralde A, et al. (2005) Surnames and dialects in France: Population structure and cultural evolution. J Theor Biol 237: 75–86. PubMed

Scapoli C, Mamolini E, Carrieri A, Rodriguez-Larralde A, Barrai I (2007) Surnames in Western Europe: A comparison of the subcontinental populations through isonymy. Theor Popul Biol 71: 37–48. PubMed

Degioanni A, Darlu P, Raffoux C (2003) Analysis of the French National Registry of unrelated bone marrow donors, using surnames as a tool for improving geographical localisation of HLA haplotypes. Eur J Hum Genet 11: 794–801. PubMed

Manni F, Toupance B, Sabbagh A, Heyer E (2005) New method for surname studies of ancient patrilineal population structures, and possible application to improvement of Y-chromosome sampling. Am J Phys Anthropol 126: 214–228. PubMed

Bowden GR, Balaresque P, King TE, Hansen Z, Lee AC, et al. (2008) Excavating past population structures by surname-based sampling: the genetic legacy of the Vikings in northwest England. Mol Biol Evol 25: 301–309. PubMed PMC

King TE, Jobling MA (2009) What's in a name? Y chromosomes, surnames and the genetic genealogy revolution. Trends Genet 25: 351–360. PubMed

Manni F, Toupance B (2010) Autochthony and HLA frequencies in the Netherlands: When surnames are useless markers. Hum Biol 82: 457–467. PubMed

Winney B, Boumertit A, Day T, Davison D, Echeta Ch, et al. (2012) People of the British Isles: preliminary analysis of genotypes and surnames in a UK control population. Eur J Hum Genet 20: 203–210. PubMed PMC

Mateos P, Longley PA, O'Sullivan D (2011) Ethnicity and population structure in personal naming networks. PLoS One 6: e22943. PubMed PMC

Cheshire J, Mateos P, Longley PA (2011) Delineating Europe's cultural regions: population structure and surname clustering. Hum Biol 83: 573–598. PubMed

Longley PA, Cheshire J, Mateos P (2011) Creating a regional geography of Britain through the spatial analysis of surnames. Geoforum 42: 506–516.

Hidaldo CA, Klinger B, Barabási AL, Hausmann R (2007) The product space conditions the development of nations. Science 317: 482–487. PubMed

Manni F, Heeringa W, Toupance B, Nerbonne J (2008) Do surname differences mirror dialect variation? Hum Biol 80: 41–64. PubMed

Newman MEJ (2010) Networks: An Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press. 772 p.

Shannon P, Markiel A, Ozier O, Baliga NS, Wang JT, et al. (2003) Cytoscape: a software environment for integrated models of biomolecular interaction networks. Genome Res 13: 2498–2504. PubMed PMC

Hlubinková Z (2006) Prechýlené podoby ženských príjmení v ceských nárecích (Feminine Derivatives from Masculine Surnames in Czech Dialects). Acta Onomastica 47: 227–232.

Novotný J, Cermáková D, Janská E (2007) Rozmístení cizincu a jeho podminující factory: pokus o kvantitativní analýzu. Geografie 112: 204–220.

Cermák Z, Janská E (2011) Rozmístení a migrace cizincu jako soucást sociálnegeografické diferenciace Ceska. Geografie 116: 422–439.

Davidová E (1995) Romano drom – Cesty Romu. Olomouc, Vydavatelství Univerzity Palackého.

Handley LJ, Manica A, Goudet J, Balloux F (2007) Going the distance: human population genetics in a clinal world. Trends Genet 23: 432–439. PubMed

Mateos P (2007) A review of name-based ethnicity classification methods and their potential in population studies. Popul Space Place 13: 243–263.

Find record

Citation metrics

Loading data ...

Archiving options

Loading data ...