Sensing the Chinese Diaspora: How Mobile Apps Can Provide Insights into Global Migration Flows
Minhui Xue, Xin Yuan, Heather Lee, and Keith Ross

TL;DR
This paper explores how country-centric mobile apps with location services, exemplified by WeChat, can be used to analyze and generate migration statistics for the Chinese diaspora worldwide.
Contribution
It introduces a novel methodology combining GPS hacking, automation, and OCR to study diaspora populations through mobile app data.
Findings
Collected data from 32 cities revealing diaspora distribution.
Insights into recent shifts in Chinese diaspora patterns.
Demonstrated feasibility of using mobile apps for migration studies.
Abstract
Many countries today have "country-centric mobile apps" which are mobile apps that are primarily used by residents of a specific country. Many of these country-centric apps also include a location-based service which takes advantage of the smartphone's API access to the smartphone's current GPS location. In this paper, we investigate how such country-centric apps with location-based services can be employed to study the diaspora associated with ethnic and cultural groups. Our methodology combines GPS hacking, automated task tools for mobile phones, and OCR to generate migration statistics for diaspora. As a case study, we apply our methodology to WeChat, an enormously popular app within China and among ethnic Chinese worldwide. Using WeChat, we collect data about the Chinese diaspora in 32 cities. The combined data provides interesting insights to the modern Chinese diaspora and how it…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · Opportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Sharing Economy and Platforms
