Revealing Critical Characteristics of Mobility Patterns in New York City during the Onset of COVID-19 Pandemic
Akhil Anil Rajput, Qingchun Li, Xinyu Gao, Ali Mostafavi

TL;DR
This study analyzes how COVID-19 and government policies drastically altered mobility patterns in New York City, revealing significant disruptions and shifts in population movement during the early pandemic phase.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of mobility changes in NYC during COVID-19 using multiple datasets, highlighting the impact of policies on human movement at borough levels.
Findings
Mobility dropped by about 80% in mid-March 2020.
Disruptions were most significant in Manhattan.
Population density increased in Brooklyn and Queens.
Abstract
New York has become one of the worst-affected COVID-19 hotspots and a pandemic epicenter due to the ongoing crisis. This paper identifies the impact of the pandemic and the effectiveness of government policies on human mobility by analyzing multiple datasets available at both macro and micro levels for the New York City. Using data sources related to population density, aggregated population mobility, public rail transit use, vehicle use, hotspot and non-hotspot movement patterns, and human activity agglomeration, we analyzed the inter-borough and intra-borough moment for New York City by aggregating the data at the borough level. We also assessed the internodal population movement amongst hotspot and non-hotspot points of interest for the month of March and April 2020. Results indicate a drop of about 80% in people's mobility in the city, beginning in mid-March. The movement to and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Transport and Accessibility · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
