Behavior-based dependency networks between places shape urban economic resilience
Urban economic resilience is intricately linked to how disruptions caused by pandemics, disasters, and technological shifts ripple through businesses and urban amenities. Disruptions, such as closures of non-essential businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic, not only affect those places directly but...
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Zusammenfassung: | Urban economic resilience is intricately linked to how disruptions caused by
pandemics, disasters, and technological shifts ripple through businesses and
urban amenities. Disruptions, such as closures of non-essential businesses
during the COVID-19 pandemic, not only affect those places directly but also
influence how people live and move, spreading the impact on other businesses
and increasing the overall economic shock. However, it is unclear how much
businesses depend on each other in these situations. Leveraging large-scale
human mobility data and millions of same-day visits in New York, Boston, Los
Angeles, Seattle, and Dallas, we quantify dependencies between
points-of-interest (POIs) encompassing businesses, stores, and amenities.
Compared to places' physical proximity, dependency networks computed from human
mobility exhibit significantly higher rates of long-distance connections and
biases towards specific pairs of POI categories. We show that using
behavior-based dependency relationships improves the predictability of business
resilience during shocks, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, by around 40% compared
to distance-based models. Simulating hypothetical urban shocks reveals that
neglecting behavior-based dependencies can lead to a substantial
underestimation of the spatial cascades of disruptions on businesses and urban
amenities. Our findings underscore the importance of measuring the complex
relationships woven through behavioral patterns in human mobility to foster
urban economic resilience to shocks. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2311.18108 |