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Does anyone know of a good library for mapping a person’s name to his or her sex?

I'm currently writing an application in which someone should enter their firstname and I am trying to find an API I can check the firstname against to find out whether someone is male or female. Would be best if it told me how sure it is, that its either a male or female name.

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this sounds like a very bad idea. Ideas of name/gender differ greatly between regions and countries, and across generations. At best you'll end up pissing someone off for calling him a girl – Rich Seller Aug 26 at 16:55
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what if it was neither, or both? :) – Mehrdad Afshari Aug 26 at 16:55
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What are you going to do when it could be either, e.g. Gale, Terry, Pat, and so on? – PTBNL Aug 26 at 16:58
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It can ALWAYS be either. There are over two thousand women named Steven in America. – Steven Sudit Aug 26 at 17:00
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Exact duplicate: stackoverflow.com/questions/818203 – Nadia Alramli Aug 26 at 17:00
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closed as exact duplicate by Perspx, EBGreen, SilentGhost, Robert C. Cartaino, Mehrdad Afshari Aug 26 at 17:08

9 Answers

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I haven't used this (commercially) but it seems to cover what you're looking for.

http://www.gpeters.com/name-gender/

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That's basically impossible - there are a ton of samples in any language that are ambiguous.

Andrea for instance is generally consider a female first name in German speaking countries, but it's a perfectly legal male first name for Italian speakers or speaker of Rumantsch (in Switzerland). I'm sure there tons of other examples.....

Don't even get me started on Jean..... and many more........

So all I can say - good luck with your endeavour! I'm afraid you won't have much success with it, though....

Marc

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Not only is Andrea as a male name "perfectly legal", it's almost EXCLUSIVELY male in Italy (e.g. there's a number of anecdotes of Italian girls named Andrea by ethnic-German parents being called up for the draft, back when we still had it and it was for men only -- etc, etc). – Alex Martelli Aug 26 at 17:13
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If you're writing the app, why don't you have a radio button for male/female? Trying to surreptitiously determine sex sounds suspiciously contrary to accepted privacy policy, data protection and anti-discrimination laws.

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It won't be easy with a boy named Sue.

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Thats why I want a percentage how sure it is. – Thomaschaaf Aug 26 at 16:58
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Good luck with all the cases of Chris, Kim, Alex, Andrea, etc, etc, that you'll be hit with. First name is just too weak a determinant of gender, so I suggest you completely rethink your approach!

Edit: what's particularly troublesome is that for many names the gender association is strongly culture-specific. The interesting online service that another answer suggested indicates that "in popular usage" (in what culture...?) Kim is overwhelmingly more likely to be a female name, and Andrea even more so.

I do not doubt that this is true in some cultures, but in Korea Kim is overwhelmingly male, and in Italy Andrea is just about exclusively male (as are several other first names ending in A: Luca, Nicola, Enea, ... -- even though in Italian the A ending is MOSTLY associated with female gender, both in first names and other contexts).

Moreover, customers who live in a culture where their first name (no doubt bestowed on them by parents proud of their different cultural heritage) tends to be perceived as the "other" gender may easily feel touchy about it, exactly because they're used to the confusion and resent the assumption. So, by informed guessing, you might be right more often than not, and STILL make serious enemies... so ask yourself, would that be worth it?

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Also available is a perl module here: Text::GenderFromName

BUt, as the other posters have already asked, are you sure this is a good idea? You'd need to be sure that you have thought of the problems that could occur when your software guesses wrong (and it will), and know how to minimize those.

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You couldn't definatly could not determine the gender of a person from their name. Event a percentage match would not help you here. Its impossible. If tomorrow, I changed my name to Jenny, any result you got back would be useless..

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You tell 'em Jenny! – x0n Aug 26 at 17:03
You might be able to change your name, Jenny, but don't change your number! Eight six seven five three oh ni-ee-yai-ine! – Beska Aug 26 at 17:10
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There are several companies that provide this service for business customers, usually in a batch format - you send them a file with all of your client data (name, address, etc.) and they will try to determine the gender for each record. However, they usually use several factors in determining the gender: last name can give some hint to ethnicity as can the address if the country is specified. However, even these professional services usually give a gender on a sliding scale (1 - probably male, 2 - possibly male, 3 - unknown, 4 - possibly female, 5 - probably female). As other posters have mentioned it's impossible to do accurately.

The short answer is: you need to look at more than just the first name to have any chance of reasonable accuracy.

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Sometimes you'll just never know:

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