Dissecting the Spatial Structure of Cities from Human Mobility Patterns to Define Functional Urban Boundaries
Francisco J. Humeres, Horacio Samaniego

TL;DR
This paper introduces a spectral analysis-based method to define functional urban boundaries using human mobility data, revealing distinct scaling behaviors in urban and rural areas and improving city delineation beyond administrative borders.
Contribution
It presents a novel network centrality approach to distinguish urban from rural land-uses based on human mobility patterns, enhancing city boundary definitions.
Findings
Urban areas exhibit near-linear scaling of trips with population.
The method identifies urban boundaries by clustering places with significant mobility flows.
Chilean cities show clear differences in trip scaling between urban and rural regions.
Abstract
Since the industrial revolution, accelerated urban growth has overflown administrative divisions, merged cities into large built extensions, and blurred the boundaries between urban and rural land-uses. These traits, present in most of contemporary metropolis, complicate the definition of cities, a crucial issue considering that objective and comparable metrics are the basic inputs needed for the planning and design of sustainable urban environments. In this context, city definitions that respond to administrative or political criteria usually overlook human dynamics, a key factor that could help to make cities comparable across the urban fabric of diverse social, cultural and economic realities. Using a technique based on the spectral analysis of complex networks, we rank places in 11 of the major Chilean urban regions from a high-resolution human mobility dataset: Official…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRegional Economics and Spatial Analysis · Urban Transport and Accessibility · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
