Are there statistics of "name ambiguity?
For example, how many people share the same full name on average?
This would be particularily interesting per country.
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Sign up to join this communityAlthough it may seem otherwise when researching a family with a common name in a limited area, Anglo-Saxon full names (first and last) are surprisingly unique. It's statistically quite uncommon for two full names to be the same.
The Social Security Death Index (Death Master File) is a file of about 88 million people, a subset of those who have died in the United States in the past 70 or so years (with most of the names in the later years).
Using that data (for the 2010-11-17 edition), I've sorted it by first and last name (ignoring middle initials or names, as they're not consistently reported). There are 31,425,850 different unique names for the 87,873,196 people listed.
Here are most common full names (first 50 shown, with the number of times they occur):
20944 JAMES SMITH
20590 WILLIAM SMITH
18845 MARY SMITH
17938 JOHN SMITH
16307 ROBERT SMITH
13540 JAMES WILLIAMS
13432 JAMES JOHNSON
12980 WILLIAM JOHNSON
12807 CHARLES SMITH
12625 JAMES BROWN
12366 JOHN JOHNSON
12296 MARY JOHNSON
12125 JOHN WILLIAMS
11957 WILLIAM BROWN
11873 ROBERT JOHNSON
11790 WILLIAM JONES
10915 GEORGE SMITH
10707 MARY WILLIAMS
10690 JAMES JONES
10514 MARY BROWN
10323 JOHN MILLER
10022 MARY JONES
9989 WILLIAM MILLER
9869 JOHN JONES
9768 ROBERT WILLIAMS
9700 JOHN BROWN
9604 ROBERT JONES
9560 JAMES DAVIS
9416 ROBERT BROWN
9069 WILLIAM DAVIS
8906 MARY MILLER
8671 JOHN DAVIS
8201 ROBERT MILLER
8083 CHARLES JOHNSON
8037 MARY DAVIS
7986 JAMES WILSON
7506 JAMES MILLER
7285 HELEN SMITH
7243 JAMES MOORE
7116 JAMES TAYLOR
7103 CHARLES BROWN
7095 JOHN ANDERSON
7017 WILLIAM WILSON
7015 MARGARET SMITH
6989 JOHN WILSON
6983 CHARLES MILLER
6956 GEORGE JOHNSON
6849 CHARLES WILLIAMS
6756 DOROTHY SMITH
6739 WILLIAM TAYLOR
Even the most common name, James Smith, only occurs 20,944 times (out of 87,873,196) - so 0.02%, or 1 in 4200 people have that name. And it rapidly tails off - there are only 2,395 names that occur more than 1,000 times, totalling 4,848,744 people (and this is ignoring middle names, which would make them more unique).
The mode (most commonly occurring frequency) is 1 with 23,524,403, in other words there's a more than 1 in 4 chance any particular full name only occurs once. There's only a 1 in 18 chance that a name is a name that occurs more than 1,000 times. The mean number of times each name occurs is 2.8, the standard deviation is 26.5.
Since this is historical data, based on people dying decades ago (so born many more decades ago), it won't reflect the current name frequencies in the US.
An article last year used full name frequencies from the recent US White Pages (so still biased, towards older landline users). That has many more Hispanic names, and a strange dearth of John Smiths: Why Aren’t There More John Smiths in the U.S.?
A 2009 report of Facebook names found instead there were too many Jane Smiths (possibly as fake names): Most Common First, Last, and Full Names on Facebook
As you mentioned, it would be nice to have the uniqueness of names by country (and culture). I'm not aware of any source for this, since it's hard to get a full name list (even historical) for most countries, or censuses. In most countries, there are almost no bulk downloads possible for genealogy or name data (other than separate tables of first and last name ranks).
However, a larger Facebook name list from October 2010 (170,879,859 names) is moderately global and has 100,128,460 different full "real" names (some of these names will be fiction and intentionally original). The following names make the top 50. Note how they occur even less times, despite the larger sample, because there's a wider variety of names. It's heavily biased towards male names, perhaps because female users are less likely to complete their real names.
17204 john smith
7440 david smith
7200 michael smith
6784 chris smith
6371 mike smith
6149 arun kumar
5980 james smith
5939 amit kumar
5926 imran khan
5861 jason smith
5374 chris johnson
5294 jessica smith
5231 chris brown
5210 mike jones
5092 michael johnson
5084 mark smith
5039 sarah smith
4953 anil kumar
4877 manoj kumar
4875 praveen kumar
4771 ashley smith
4749 vijay kumar
4693 kevin smith
4646 david johnson
4587 chris jones
4538 sunil kumar
4515 ryan smith
4493 robert smith
4462 david jones
4452 brian smith
4367 jennifer smith
4343 ahmed ali
4316 steve smith
4315 rajesh kumar
4291 rahul sharma
4230 paul smith
4213 michael williams
4201 ravi kumar
4155 michael brown
4153 raj kumar
4141 david brown
4031 amanda smith
3965 lisa smith
3946 ali khan
3936 matt smith
3921 david williams
3920 chris williams
3826 john williams
3757 andrew smith
3742 adam smith
Here the mode is 1 with 86,585,871 - so there's a better than 1 in 2 chance any particular real full name on Facebook is unique. The mean is 1.7, standard deviation is 10.4.
It's unclear why some names in the 2009 Facebook report, like Jane Smith and Juan Carlos, hardly appear in the 2010 list. Both lists are just samples, so there must be something very different about the way they were obtained (and which shows that all such rankings should be considered just estimates based on available data).
Even that Facebook data is hardly global - strong on western countries, and south Asia, but it very poorly represents names from East Asia, Africa, and South America (one reason: that list is limited to names which start with a latin character set character).
There are some countries where names are nearly unique (like Thailand). Many other cultures have a shortage of "last" names (family names), sometimes because of the way they were introduced. This applies especially to China, Korea and parts of Scandinavia. There are also countries, like Iceland and Korea (among others), which require first names to be from an approved list, limiting the variety of names available.
UCL did some work on the distribution of surnames in the UK which is accessible via the PublicProfiler website. I'm not aware of anything that looks at the combination of forenames and surnames.