Behavioral changes during the pandemic worsened income diversity of urban encounters
Takahiro Yabe, Bernardo Garcia Bulle Bueno, Xiaowen Dong, Alex `Sandy', Pentland, Esteban Moro

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the COVID-19 pandemic reduced income diversity in urban encounters using large-scale mobility data, revealing persistent declines despite mobility recovery and highlighting behavioral factors affecting urban social diversity.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis of income diversity changes in urban encounters during the pandemic, emphasizing behavioral impacts beyond mobility restrictions.
Findings
Urban encounter diversity decreased by 15-30% during the pandemic.
Diversity decline persisted through late 2021 despite mobility recovery.
Behavioral changes, including reduced exploration, worsened long-term diversity.
Abstract
Diversity of physical encounters and social interactions in urban environments are known to spur economic productivity and innovation in cities, while also to foster social capital and resilience of communities. However, mobility restrictions during the pandemic have forced people to substantially reduce urban physical encounters, raising questions on the social implications of such behavioral changes. In this paper, we study how the income diversity of urban encounters have changed during different periods throughout the pandemic, using a large-scale, privacy-enhanced mobility dataset of more than one million anonymized mobile phone users in four large US cities, collected across three years spanning before and during the pandemic. We find that the diversity of urban encounters have substantially decreased (by 15% to 30%) during the pandemic and has persisted through late 2021, even…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · Urban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies · Urban Transport and Accessibility
