Virtual Networks and Poverty Analysis in Senegal
Neeti Pokhriyal, Wen Dong, Venu Govindaraju

TL;DR
This paper leverages mobile communication data to create detailed poverty maps in Senegal, revealing regional disparities and behavioral indicators linked to poverty, aiding targeted policy interventions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to predict poverty indices using cellular data, producing high-resolution poverty maps and analyzing behavioral correlations for better understanding.
Findings
Dakar dominates communication and economic activity, marginalizing other regions.
Cellular data can predict poverty indices at fine spatial resolutions.
Behavioral statistics correlate with poverty indicators, offering alternative mapping insights.
Abstract
Do today's communication technologies hold potential to alleviate poverty? The mobile phone's accessibility and use allows us with an unprecedented volume of data on social interactions, mobility and more. Can this data help us better understand, characterize and alleviate poverty in one of the poorest nations in the world. Our study is an attempt in this direction. We discuss two concepts, which are both interconnected and immensely useful for securing the important link between mobile accessibility and poverty. First, we use the cellular-communications data to construct virtual connectivity maps for Senegal, which are then correlated with the poverty indicators to learn a model. Our model predicts poverty index at any spatial resolution. Thus, we generate Poverty Maps for Senegal at an unprecedented finer resolution. Such maps are essential for understanding what characterizes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · ICT in Developing Communities · COVID-19 epidemiological studies
