Given the rapid recent trend of urbanization, a better understanding of how urban infrastructure mediates socioeconomic interactions and economic systems is of vital importance. While the accessibility of location-enabled devices as well as large-scale datasets of human activities, has fueled significant advances in our understanding, there is little agreement on the linkage between socioeconomic status and its influence on movement patterns, in particular, the role of inequality. Here, we analyze a heavily aggregated and anonymized summary of global mobility and investigate the relationships between socioeconomic status and mobility across a hundred cities in the US and Brazil. We uncover two types of relationships, finding either a clear connection or little-to-no interdependencies. The former tend to be characterized by low levels of public transportation usage, inequitable access to basic amenities and services, and segregated clusters of communities in terms of income, with the latter class showing the opposite trends. Our findings provide useful lessons in designing urban habitats that serve the larger interests of all inhabitants irrespective of their economic status.
翻译:鉴于最近城市化的迅速趋势,更好地了解城市基础设施如何影响社会经济互动和经济体系至关重要。虽然由地点驱动的装置以及人类活动大规模数据集的可获取性促使我们理解有了显著进展,但对于社会经济地位及其对流动模式的影响,特别是对不平等的作用之间的联系,几乎没有一致意见。在这里,我们分析了全球流动性的粗略和匿名汇总,并调查了美国和巴西100个城市的社会经济地位和流动性之间的关系。我们发现了两类关系,要么是明确的联系,要么是很少或没有多少相互依存关系。前者的特点是公共交通使用率低,获得基本设施和服务的机会不平等,以及收入方面的社区群体隔离,后者呈现相反的趋势。我们的调查结果为设计有利于所有居民更大利益的城市生境提供了有益的经验教训,而不论其经济状况如何。