Universal expansion of human mobility across urban scales
Lu Zhong, Lei Dong, Qi Wang, Chaoming Song, Jianxi Gao

TL;DR
This paper uncovers a universal scaling law in human mobility, showing that the spatial extent of individual movement modules expands sublinearly with distance from home, linking urban hierarchy and mobility patterns across scales.
Contribution
The study reveals a universal scaling law in human mobility modules and connects classical urban theories with empirical mobility data across multiple scales.
Findings
Mobility module radius expands sublinearly with distance from home.
Modules correspond to nested urban hierarchies.
Universal pattern observed across three orders of magnitude.
Abstract
Human mobility is a fundamental process underpinning socioeconomic life and urban structure. Classic theories, such as egocentric activity spaces and central place theory, provide crucial insights into specific facets of movement, like home-centricity and hierarchical spatial organization. However, identifying universal characteristics or an underlying principle that quantitatively links these disparate perspectives has remained a challenge. Here, we reveal such a connection by analyzing the spatial structure of individual daily mobility trajectories using network-based modules. We discover a universal scaling law: the spatial extent (radius) of these mobility modules expands sublinearly with increasing distance from home, a pattern consistent across three orders of magnitude. Furthermore, we demonstrate that these modules precisely map onto the nested hierarchy of urban systems,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
