Literature DB >> 34321509

Practical geospatial and sociodemographic predictors of human mobility.

Corrine W Ruktanonchai1, Shengjie Lai2, Chigozie E Utazi2, Alex D Cunningham2, Patrycja Koper2, Grant E Rogers2, Nick W Ruktanonchai3, Adam Sadilek4, Dorothea Woods2, Andrew J Tatem2, Jessica E Steele2, Alessandro Sorichetta2.   

Abstract

Understanding seasonal human mobility at subnational scales has important implications across sciences, from urban planning efforts to disease modelling and control. Assessing how, when, and where populations move over the course of the year, however, requires spatially and temporally resolved datasets spanning large periods of time, which can be rare, contain sensitive information, or may be proprietary. Here, we aim to explore how a set of broadly available covariates can describe typical seasonal subnational mobility in Kenya pre-COVID-19, therefore enabling better modelling of seasonal mobility across low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings in non-pandemic settings. To do this, we used the Google Aggregated Mobility Research Dataset, containing anonymized mobility flows aggregated over users who have turned on the Location History setting, which is off by default. We combined this with socioeconomic and geospatial covariates from 2018 to 2019 to quantify seasonal changes in domestic and international mobility patterns across years. We undertook a spatiotemporal analysis within a Bayesian framework to identify relevant geospatial and socioeconomic covariates explaining human movement patterns, while accounting for spatial and temporal autocorrelations. Typical pre-pandemic mobility patterns in Kenya mostly consisted of shorter, within-county trips, followed by longer domestic travel between counties and international travel, which is important in establishing how mobility patterns changed post-pandemic. Mobility peaked in August and December, closely corresponding to school holiday seasons, which was found to be an important predictor in our model. We further found that socioeconomic variables including urbanicity, poverty, and female education strongly explained mobility patterns, in addition to geospatial covariates such as accessibility to major population centres and temperature. These findings derived from novel data sources elucidate broad spatiotemporal patterns of how populations move within and beyond Kenya, and can be easily generalized to other LMIC settings before the COVID-19 pandemic. Understanding such pre-pandemic mobility patterns provides a crucial baseline to interpret both how these patterns have changed as a result of the pandemic, as well as whether human mobility patterns have been permanently altered once the pandemic subsides. Our findings outline key correlates of mobility using broadly available covariates, alleviating the data bottlenecks of highly sensitive and proprietary mobile phone datasets, which many researchers do not have access to. These results further provide novel insight on monitoring mobility proxies in the context of disease surveillance and control efforts through LMIC settings.
© 2021. The Author(s).

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34321509     DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-94683-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


  2 in total

1.  A BAYESIAN SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL MODELING APPROACH TO MAPPING GEOGRAPHIC VARIATION IN MORTALITY RATES FOR SUBNATIONAL AREAS WITH R-INLA.

Authors:  Diba Khana; Lauren M Rossen; Holly Hedegaard; Margaret Warner
Journal:  J Data Sci       Date:  2018-01

2.  Contact, Travel, and Transmission: The Impact of Winter Holidays on Influenza Dynamics in the United States.

Authors:  Anne Ewing; Elizabeth C Lee; Cécile Viboud; Shweta Bansal
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2017-03-01       Impact factor: 5.226

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  Global holiday datasets for understanding seasonal human mobility and population dynamics.

Authors:  Shengjie Lai; Alessandro Sorichetta; Jessica Steele; Corrine W Ruktanonchai; Alexander D Cunningham; Grant Rogers; Patrycja Koper; Dorothea Woods; Maksym Bondarenko; Nick W Ruktanonchai; Weifeng Shi; Andrew J Tatem
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 6.444

  1 in total

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