论文标题
城市运动的隐藏普遍性
The hidden universality of movement in cities
论文作者
论文摘要
所有移动物种与环境的相互作用都取决于其运动方式:他们参观的地方以及它们去那里的频率。在人类社会中,在城市中,同居的普遍形式是人们的高度动态和多样化的运动是社会经济生活的几乎每个方面,包括社会互动或疾病的传播,最终是城市基础设施,生产力,创新和技术发展的关键。然而,尽管城市运动的时空结构至关重要,但控制人口流向特定位置的差异的法律仍然难以捉摸。在这里,我们表明,在运动的明显复杂性背后,基于访问的频率和旅行的距离,一个令人惊讶的简单通用缩放关系将个人流向任何特定位置。我们提出了第一个原则论点,该论点指出,访问个体的数量应作为访问频率和旅行距离的乘积的平方平方减少;或等于,作为具有指数$ \左右的权力定律! - $ 2。使用大规模的数据分析,我们证明,人口流量在几乎所有全球测试的地区遵守这一理论预测,从欧洲到亚洲,亚洲和非洲,无论详细的地理,文化或发展水平如何。揭示的规律性为在高空间和时间分辨率下的移动通量建模提供了前所未有的可能性,并且对城市中的任何运动,空间组织和社会互动的任何理论构成了重要的限制。
The interaction of all mobile species with their environment hinges on their movement patterns: the places they visit and how frequently they go there. In human society, where the prevalent form of cohabitation is in cities, the highly dynamic and diverse movement of people is fundamental to almost every aspect of socio-economic life, including social interactions or disease spreading, and ultimately is key to the evolution of urban infrastructure, productivity, innovation and technology. However, despite the crucial role of the spatio-temporal structure of movement in cities, the laws that govern the variation of population flows to specific locations have remained elusive. Here we show that behind the apparent complexity of movement a surprisingly simple universal scaling relation drives the flow of individuals to any specific location based on both frequency of visitation and distance travelled. We derive a first principles argument stating that the number of visiting individuals should decrease as an inverse square of the product of visitation frequency and travel distance; or, equivalently, as a power law with exponent $\approx \! -$2. Using large-scale data analyses, we demonstrate that population flows obey this theoretical prediction in virtually all tested areas across the globe, ranging from Europe and America to Asia and Africa, regardless of the detailed geographies, cultures or levels of development. The revealed regularity offers unprecedented possibilities for the modelling of mobility fluxes at high spatial and temporal resolution, and it places an important constraint on any theory of movement, spatial organisation and social interaction in cities.