Threshold Selection: Using perch() and murmuration_plot()

knitr::opts_chunk$set(
  collapse = TRUE,
  comment  = "#>",
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Why the threshold matters

In the Fellegi-Sunter probabilistic linkage framework, every candidate pair of records receives a composite log-likelihood ratio score. Pairs scoring above a chosen threshold are classified as matches; those below are classified as non-matches. This threshold is dataset-specific — there is no universal correct value, because the score scale depends entirely on which variables are compared, their quality, and the composition of the two datasets being linked.

Choosing the threshold too low increases recall (more true matches recovered) at the cost of precision (more false matches accepted). Choosing it too high does the reverse. The optimal value sits in the valley between the bimodal score distribution — the gap between the non-match cluster at low scores and the match cluster at high scores.

starling provides two complementary tools:


Australian linkage authority benchmarks

The three key Australian and international reference points:

| Threshold range | Authority | Basis | |---|---|---| | 10–20 (clerical zone) | AIHW / WA Data Linkage Unit (WADLU) | Standard two-threshold practice: confirmed matches above ~20, confirmed non-matches below ~10, marginal pairs sent for human adjudication | | ~15–20 | Population Health Research Network (PHRN) | Operational target: false-match rate < 0.5% with a full variable set (Medicare + 2 names + DOB) | | 17 | starling default | Balanced starting point for SCPHU routine surveillance linkage |

These are reference points, not rules. The correct threshold for your dataset is the one that sits in the valley of your score distribution.


Example: running perch() on scored pairs

library(starling)

# Simulate a scored pairs object (bimodal: non-matches low, matches high)
set.seed(20260624L)
n_nonmatch <- 800
n_match    <- 200
pairs_pred <- data.frame(
  weights = c(
    rnorm(n_nonmatch, mean = 5,  sd = 3),   # non-match cluster
    rnorm(n_match,    mean = 20, sd = 3)    # match cluster
  )
)

# Run the sensitivity sweep
results <- perch(
  pairs_pred    = pairs_pred,
  n_records_df1 = 250L,         # size of the primary dataset
  thresholds    = seq(5, 28, by = 1),
  report        = TRUE,
  plot          = FALSE          # set TRUE in interactive session
)

The [*] markers in the table show the four reference threshold values from AIHW, PHRN, and the starling default.


Example: visualising the score distribution

murmuration_plot(pairs_pred, threshold = 17, show_density = FALSE,
                 palette = "sch")

A well-behaved distribution is clearly bimodal. If yours is not:


Using perch_before_linking = TRUE inside murmuration()

For the common one-step workflow, set perch_before_linking = TRUE in the murmuration() call. The sensitivity table is printed immediately after the EM model fits — before the threshold is applied — giving you a chance to review before the linked dataset is produced.

linked <- murmuration(
  df1                  = cases_blocked,
  df2                  = vax_blocked,
  linkage_type         = "v2c",
  event_date           = "onset_date",
  id_var               = "id_var",
  blocking_var         = "block1",
  compare_vars         = c("lettername1", "lettername2", "dob", "medicare10"),
  threshold_value      = 17,
  perch_before_linking = TRUE     # <-- prints the perch() table mid-linkage
)

In a Quarto document or batch job (interactive() == FALSE), the table is printed to the console but the plot is suppressed and execution continues automatically. In an interactive session, the plot is displayed.

If the table suggests a better threshold (say 19), re-run murmuration() with the new value. The EM model must be re-fitted — the scored pairs are not stored between calls. This is by design: murmuration() is a single-step function.


Clerical review zone

In a formal two-threshold design (AIHW/WADLU practice), pairs in the 10–20 zone are neither automatically accepted nor rejected — they are sent for human review. The n_clerical column in perch() output shows how many pairs fall in the review zone around each candidate threshold (default window: ±3 units).

A large n_clerical relative to n_above means the threshold sits in a high-density region — small threshold changes would reclassify many pairs. This is a signal that you are sitting on a slope, not in a valley.


Session information

sessionInfo()


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starling documentation built on July 10, 2026, 9:07 a.m.