| Literature DB >> 35720981 |
Abstract
This article maps the scientific literature in human mobility behavior in the context of the current pandemic. Through bibliometrics, we analyze the content of published scientific studies indexed on the Web of Science and Scopus during 2020. This enables us the detection of current hotspots and future directions of research. After a co-occurrence of keywords and evidence map analysis, four themes are identified, namely, Land Transport - Operations, Land Transport - Traffic Demand, Air Transport and Environment. We show how air transportation- and environmental-related studies tend to be more mature research whereas the understanding of changes in travel behavior (e.g., telecommuting, preventive measures or health protection behavior) tends to be immature. By using a topic modeling approach, we identify multiple sub-themes within each theme. Our framework adopts a smart literature review approach that can be constantly updated, enabling an analysis of many articles, with little investment of the researcher's time, but also provides high degree of transparency and replicability. We also put forth a research agenda that can help inform and shape transport policy and practice responses to COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: Bibliometrics; COVID-19; Text mining; Travel behavior
Year: 2021 PMID: 35720981 PMCID: PMC9187318 DOI: 10.1016/j.scs.2021.102916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Cities Soc ISSN: 2210-6707 Impact factor: 10.696
Fig. 1Flowchart of the experimental procedure to identify the emerging COVID-19 research trends in human mobility behavior..
Fig. 2Publication venues.
Fig. 3Publication venues and monthly number of articles.
Fig. 4Keyword co-occurrence network of COVID-19 literature in the human mobility behavior area. The network graph depicts the top 50 keywords. The size of the node indicates frequency and edges represent co-occurrence relationships. Colors are used to highlight node clusters using Louvain method for community detection (Blondel et al., 2008). (For interpretation of the references to color in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)
Fig. 5Evidence maps.
Fig. 6Number of sub-themes vs. perplexity score (lower is better) and coherence (higher is better).
Emerging sub-themes detected by topic modeling analysis and indicative references.
| Land Transport --- Operations |
| Sub-theme 1. Technological tools and railway operations |
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| Sub-theme 2. Control measures for urban traffic |
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| Sub-theme 3. Non-motorized mobility |
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| Sub-theme 4. Public transit |
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| Land Transport — Traffic Demand |
| Sub-theme 1. Protective behavior and working from home |
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| Sub-theme 2. Spreading speed and traffic flow |
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| Sub-theme 3. Sustainability of urban mobility |
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| Air Transport |
| Sub-theme 1. Aviation’s recovery flight plan |
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| Sub-theme 2. Passenger preferences and willingness to fly |
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| Sub-theme 3. Safety and security in aviation |
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| Sub-theme 4. Airlines’ strategic responses |
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| Environment |
| Sub-theme 1. Changes in concentration of air pollutants |
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| Sub-theme 2. Air transport mobility and noise emissions |
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| Sub-theme 3. Energy systems and renewable fuels |
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Indicative major issues revealed by the pandemic and major recommendations.
| Physical distancing in mass transit operations is almost infeasible to implement in crowded cities |
| • Technology-based self-service (e.g., interactive vending machines or mobile payment systems) facilitate contactless travel |
| Urgent need to understand the robustness of railway network to predict and anticipate large-scale disruptions |
| • Collection of near real-time reliable empirical data |
| • Cascading effects can largely affect the functionality of railway transport |
| Previous forms of long-distance hypermobility are incompatible with recent lockdown policies |
| • Encourage modal shift towards more sustainable active modes of transport |
| • Provide transit users with information about levels of congestion inside public transport platforms/vehicles |
| • Use smart technologies to check body temperature of users |
| • Staff behaviors should be properly regulated |
| • Tracking the health and movements of travelers |
| • Transition towards |
| Debate surrounding the use of face masks |
| • Without face protection, frequent cleaning, and ventilation, public transportation increase risk of viral transmission |
| • Avoid talking without wearing masks and talking loudly |
| Conventional public transport is often unable to meet the newly impose regulations |
| • Bike sharing systems have shown to be more resilient than the subway systems with less significant ridership drops |
| • Promote greater connectivity among users, vehicles, and infrastructures through real-time smartphone apps |
| Rethink urban spaces and mobility |
| • Consider cycle paths, processes, and systems, taking into account the entire life cycle of the infrastructure |
| • Adoption of pedestrian and traffic calming areas, sharing mobility programs and temporary tactical urbanism tools |
| Challenges to manage passenger flows due to the complexity of station design and unexpected passenger behavior |
| • Operators must monitor, scan, manage, investigate factors, and update plans based on the level of expected hazard |
| • Simulation of people movement as a powerful microscopic crowd modeling tool |
| • Evaluate epidemic control policies from both public health side (e.g., reducing infectious rate) and transportation side |
| (e.g., distributing departure time, closing bus routes) |
| Human factors within the public sector (e.g., unsafe acts or unsafe supervision) play a vital role in the control of the epidemic |
| • Human factors are likely to result in imperfect management, and the possibility of a nationwide epidemic |
| • Artificial Intelligence through automated processes can help to complement the mitigation efforts |
| Rapid and drastic changes have become apparent in people’s mobility-styles due to enacted regulations |
| • Information disseminated through television lead to higher risk perception for discretionary trips |
| • Trade-off between the severity of the threat and crippling socio-economic activities |
| • Reduce parking fees to encourage car owners to travel by private cars |
| • Issue bike-sharing coupons to encourage short-distance commuting crowds to ride bicycles |
| To how and what extent various socio-economic segments of the population have adjusted to the mitigation measures |
| • Working from home carries high potential for moving towards a more sustainable future |
| • Investment in maintaining working from home can lead to large improvements in travel networks and overall cost savings |
| • Flexible working arrangements are perhaps the biggest policy lever available to government |
| Densely populated urban environments and the heavy dependence on traffic could increase the spread of the virus |
| • Different opening hours to distribute the demand for public transport to avoid rush hours |
| • Minimize the lag of orders and actions designed to increase social distance between urban and rural areas |
| • Use of mobile data instead of census population data to assess the implicit risk of the locations |
| • Document the impact on the most vulnerable segments, e.g., those unable to socially distance |
| Inter-city migration as a main source of local transmission |
| • Proper advice should be given to those people who are likely to travel |
| • Mobility, could indicate how people perceive the risk they are exposed to and the level of risk they are willing to take |
| • Quarantine, reportage of suspected cases and shutdown of transportation as main measures to generate infection scenarios |
| • Cities should not only prevent the epidemic from the epicenter, but also protect against infection from other areas |
| Reduction in traffic demand heavy depends on network configuration |
| • Cities with high road network density and compact urban structure should decisively implement mobility restrictions measures |
| • Networks with less connectivity and lower roadway density benefits more from the demand reduction |
| Lockdown periods induced psychological and physical mobility problems but also reinvented the spatial structure of social ties |
| • Mobility sharing will reduce while the acceptance of electric cars will increase |
| • Gradually developing landscape influence on mobility transitions |
| • Closely monitor and analyze the governance responses (e.g., serious threat of increasingly populist or undemocratic governance) |
| A very rare chance for industry suppliers and policy makers to learn about the role e-scooters on urban transportation networks |
| • Regulatory regimes to handle environmental (e.g., abandoned and damaged vehicles) and safety problems (accident numbers) |
| • Limited the number of scooters per operator |
| • Potential demand can increase due to fiscal incentives and to the battery cost reduction induced by technological change |
| • Regarding the manufacturers it is of great importance to use materials on which the virus has been proven less durable |
| Challenges associated with conventional travel to stop the rapid spread of the infection |
| • Requalification of the road infrastructure and acquisition of electric micromobility |
| • Design of road infrastructures and the enhancement of pedestrian and bicycle lanes |
| • Promote integrated infrastructure design and control through intelligent transport system technologies |
| • As society is aging, shifts in the transport systems for comprehensive health promotion has become of primary importance |
| • Take into consideration the needs of the elderly, as one of the most fragile and vulnerable social groups |
| U/L-shaped recovery depending on duration and magnitude of the outbreak |
| • Create safe |
| • Focus on the prevention of the infection at airports and on-board aircraft |
| • Destination management organizations to improve their Big Data analytical and evidence-based, decision-making skills |
| • Airlines to negotiate with authorities to survive the demand shortage |
| • Restart flights too soon and too fast will result in more infections and may cause even further reduction in travel demand |
| Imported cases is critical for containment |
| • Develop risk indexes to accurately measure the imported case risk from different foreign countries and even specific routes |
| • Transport flights to be categorized into high-risk flights, medium-risk flights, and low-risk flights |
| • Local governments should provide clear instructions and countermeasures |
| • Reduce the air transport frequency without canceling all the flights |
| • Cut air services first while keeping most of the rail services |
| Airport screening measures failed in halting the spread of the virus at the very early stage of the epidemic |
| • If new confirmed cases remain stable, easing the requirements for self-isolation could increase travel demand |
| • Contactless self-service as a means to feel safe during the passenger journey |
| • Elderly passenger preferences for private transport to travel to and from the airport |
| • Airlines to develop a comprehensive strategy to protect their passengers and then to explain why these steps will be effective |
| • A clear protocol needs to be established in order to know what to do with a passenger with a positive test result (true or false) |
| Significant differences between domestic and international travel markets |
| • Increase airport shuttle and public transit frequencies right before the peak hours of international flights |
| • The reliability of mass transport modes can be marketed to passengers to increase their uses |
| • Health screening measures to be first implement within (domestic) airports, afterwards, generalization for intercontinental traffic |
| Landside capacity is crucial in the event of a health crisis |
| • Evaluate the level of service of functional subsystems (departure/arrival halls, check-in, boarding gates, baggage claim, etc.) |
| • Constantly supervise the movement of the passengers in security control lanes, and give them tips for keeping a distance |
| • Develop integrated management system to meet service quality requirements |
| (avoiding bottlenecks and long waiting times, while ensuring that sanitary measures) |
| Social distancing norms reduce airplane capacity |
| • Encourage passengers to carry fewer luggage aboard the airplane |
| • Middle-seat blocking policy |
| • Evaluate different boarding methods in terms of boarding time and health-related metrics |
| Restrictive movements, weak tourism, and curtailed income compressed passenger demand |
| • Focus on minimizing losses rather than profit maximization |
| • Provide access to markets at a deeper discount for pre-purchase via corporate fares |
| • Fleet downsizing variations and accompanying layoffs |
| • Temporary deficits and deferred cost recovery |
| The crisis would lead to consolidation and a significantly smaller industry |
| • Mergers and acquisitions, tax policy, and government subsidies |
| The need for support and the actual support to airlines provided by governments vary significantly in each country |
| • Differentiated state aid, whether to provide financial support, guarantee existing debt, or to believe in market mechanisms |
| • Public non-regulated airports to keep charges low during the crisis to rise after |
| • Reorientation of public policy in the post-pandemic may limit the importance of the policy priorities (e.g., climate change) |
| Global action to mitigate the pandemic has consequently involved switching off most pollutant emission sources |
| • Differentiation between local pollutant emissions and regional pollutant transport |
| • To enhance regional environmental cooperation and to implement a united prevention and control of air pollution |
| • Encourage people to use public transport, sharing cars and workers to work from home |
| Depending on the city, traffic-free conditions could not cause substantial reductions in pollution levels |
| • Prioritize reductions in air pollution based on what air quality standards might be feasible |
| • Investigate generation mechanisms of secondary pollutants |
| • Car-free days or odd–even number-plate schemes are effective policies to reduce NOx and NO |
| Aviation is one the most carbon-intensive forms of transport and one of the most difficult to decarbonize |
| • Development of alternative aircraft fuels, introduction of hybrid-electric, or fully electrified propulsions of aircrafts |
| • Evaluate the efficacy and net societal benefits of policy changes related to jet fuel taxation |
| The traffic reduction has also had consequences for noise |
| • Significant reduction in sound levels can be achieved through aggressive traffic reduction strategies |
| • Promote walking and cycling to improve overall sustainability of the transport infrastructure |
| • Ordinances of traffic limitation should be accompanied by appropriate interventions to reduce speed limits |
| Decarbonization of transport and economic recovery do not compete, but rather represent a win-win solution |
| • Promote and implement well-designed and reliable sustainable low-carbon fuel refineries |
| • Increase the ambition and promote higher amounts of domestic renewable and low carbon fuels |
| Little understanding about temporal and spatial variation transportation emissions |
| • If transit ridership is largely reduced, public transport can perform worst than cars on a person emissions basis |
| • Transparency of the potential individual and societal benefits of congestion pricing plans |