Exploring the Usage of Online Food Delivery Data for Intra-Urban Job and Housing Mobility Detection and Characterization
Yawen Zhang, Seth Spielman, Qi Liu, Si Shen, Jason Shuo Zhang, Qin Lv

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that online food delivery data can effectively detect and analyze intra-urban job and housing mobility at high spatial and temporal resolutions, revealing key mobility patterns and their influencing factors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of food delivery data for mobility detection, offering higher resolution insights and characterizing mobility dynamics in urban environments.
Findings
Commuting distance significantly influences mobility decisions.
Home movers balance housing costs and commuting times.
Frequent overtime workers tend to switch jobs to reduce hours.
Abstract
Human mobility plays a critical role in urban planning and policy-making. However, at certain spatial and temporal resolutions, it is very challenging to track, for example, job and housing mobility. In this study, we explore the usage of a new modality of dataset, online food delivery data, to detect job and housing mobility. By leveraging millions of meal orders from a popular online food ordering and delivery service in Beijing, China, we are able to detect job and housing moves at much higher spatial and temporal resolutions than using traditional data sources. Popular moving seasons and origins/destinations can be well identified. More importantly, we match the detected moves to both macro- and micro-level factors so as to characterize job and housing dynamics. Our findings suggest that commuting distance is a major factor for job and housing mobility. We also observe that: (1) For…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · Urban Transport and Accessibility · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies
