Wenjie Wu Jianghao Wang & Tianshi Dai in Annals of the American Association of Geographers: “A largely unexplored big data application in urban contexts is how cultural ties affect human mobility patterns. This article explores China’s intercity human mobility patterns from social media data to contribute to our understanding of this question. Exposure to human mobility patterns is measured by big data computational strategy for identifying hundreds of millions of individuals’ space–time footprint trajectories. Linguistic data are coded as a proxy for cultural ties from a unique geographically coded atlas of dialect distributions. We find that cultural ties are associated with human mobility flows between city pairs, contingent on commuting costs and geographical distances. Such effects are not distributed evenly over time and space, however. These findings present useful insights in support of the cultural mechanism that can account for the rise, decline, and dynamics of human mobility between regions….(More)”
The Geography of Cultural Ties and Human Mobility: Big Data in Urban Contexts
How to contribute:
Did you come across – or create – a compelling project/report/book/app at the leading edge of innovation in governance?
Share it with us at info@thelivinglib.org so that we can add it to the Collection!
About the Curator
Get the latest news right in you inbox
Subscribe to curated findings and actionable knowledge from The Living Library, delivered to your inbox every Friday
Related articles
artificial intelligence, social media
Governing the Metaverse
Posted in August 11, 2025 by Stefaan Verhulst
social media
This is how people in 2025 are getting their news
Posted in July 14, 2025 by Stefaan Verhulst
big data
Sudden loss of key US satellite data could send hurricane forecasting back ‘decades’
Posted in July 8, 2025 by Stefaan Verhulst