A dominance tree approach to systems of cities
Thomas Louail, Marc Barthelemy

TL;DR
This paper introduces a non-parametric dominance tree method based on Voronoi tessellations to analyze the spatial and hierarchical organization of urban systems, revealing multiscale dynamics and city importance over time.
Contribution
It presents a novel dominance tree approach that captures urban hierarchy and dynamics, outperforming traditional methods in sensitivity and multiscale analysis.
Findings
The height of nodes encodes city importance and neighborhood structure.
The method reveals non-monotonous city trajectories in the US.
City basin sizes become more homogeneous at larger scales.
Abstract
Characterizing the spatial organization of urban systems is a challenge which points to the more general problem of describing marked point processes in spatial statistics. We propose a non-parametric method that goes beyond standard tools of point pattern analysis and which is based on a mapping between the points and a "dominance tree", constructed from a recursive analysis of their Voronoi tessellation. Using toy models, we show that the height of a node in this tree encodes both its mark and the structure of its neighborhood, reflecting its importance in the system. We use historical population data in France (1876-2018) and the US (1880-2010) and show that the method highlights multiscale urban dynamics experienced by these countries. These include non-monotonous city trajectories in the US, as revealed by the evolution of their height in the tree. We show that the height of a city…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLand Use and Ecosystem Services · Urban Design and Spatial Analysis · Regional Economics and Spatial Analysis
