Abstract

“The Belt and Road” initiative has been expected to facilitate interactions among numerous city centers. This initiative would generate a number of centers, both economic and political, which would facilitate greater interaction. To explore how information flows are merged and the specific opportunities that may be offered, Chinese cities along “the Belt and Road” are selected for a case study. Furthermore, urban networks in cyberspace have been characterized by their infrastructure orientation, which implies that there is a relative dearth of studies focusing on the investigation of urban hierarchies by capturing information flows between Chinese cities along “the Belt and Road”. This paper employs Baidu, the main web search engine in China, to examine urban hierarchies. The results show that urban networks become more balanced, shifting from a polycentric to a homogenized pattern. Furthermore, cities in networks tend to have both a hierarchical system and a spatial concentration primarily in regions such as Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta region. Urban hierarchy based on web search activity does not follow the existing hierarchical system based on geospatial and economic development in all cases. Moreover, urban networks, under the framework of “the Belt and Road”, show several significant corridors and more opportunities for more cities, particularly western cities. Furthermore, factors that may influence web search activity are explored. The results show that web search activity is significantly influenced by the economic gap, geographical proximity and administrative rank of the city.

Highlights

  • The initiative of jointly building the “Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road” was proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013

  • The connection degree and GDP per person have a correlation. This correlation does not reach statistical significance, with a regression coefficient of 0.2577 in 2016. These results show that there is no obvious correlation between urban network connectivity and economic development

  • The results indicate that web search activity tends to occur between cities with a large economic gap

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Summary

Introduction

The initiative of jointly building the “Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road” (hereafter referred to as “the Belt and Road”) was proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013. The connection between Shanghai and Beijing, which is bidirectional, may be calculated based on the web search activity of users. The Baidu index is operated standardly based on its web search data that may present information infrastructures and their associated material flows between cities, which indicates an overview of urban networks among the cities.

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