Countrywide natural experiment reveals impact of built environment on physical activity
Tim Althoff, Boris Ivanovic, Jennifer L. Hicks, Scott L. Delp, and Abby C. King, Jure Leskovec

TL;DR
This large-scale natural experiment demonstrates that increasing walkability in the built environment significantly boosts physical activity levels across diverse populations, with implications for public health policy.
Contribution
This study leverages a large, longitudinal smartphone dataset to robustly establish causal links between built environment walkability and physical activity, overcoming prior methodological limitations.
Findings
Walkability increases are associated with higher physical activity levels.
Changes in activity are sustained over three months post-relocation.
Improving walkability could help millions meet physical activity guidelines.
Abstract
While physical activity is critical to human health, most people do not meet recommended guidelines. More walkable built environments have the potential to increase activity across the population. However, previous studies on the built environment and physical activity have led to mixed findings, possibly due to methodological limitations such as small cohorts, few or single locations, over-reliance on self-reported measures, and cross-sectional designs. Here, we address these limitations by leveraging a large U.S. cohort of smartphone users (N=2,112,288) to evaluate within-person longitudinal behavior changes that occurred over 248,266 days of objectively-measured physical activity across 7,447 relocations among 1,609 U.S. cities. By analyzing the results of this natural experiment, which exposed individuals to differing built environments, we find that increases in walkability are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Urban Transport and Accessibility
