Abstract

We argue here that despite the focus in cities on location and place, it is increasingly clear that a requisite understanding of how cities evolve and change depends on a thorough understanding of human movements at aggregate scales where we can observe emergent patterns in networks and flow systems. We argue that the location of activities must be understood as summations or syntheses of movements or flows, with a much clearer link between flows, activities and the networks that carry and support them. To this end, we introduce a generic class of models that enable aggregated flows of many different kinds of social and economic activity, ranging from the journey to work to email traffic, to be predicted using ideas from discrete choice theory in economics which has analogies to gravitation. We also argue that visualization is an essential construct in making sense of flows but that there are important limitations to illustrating pictorially systems with millions of component parts. To demonstrate these, we introduce a class of generic spatial interaction models and present two illustrations. Our first application is based on transit flows within the high-frequency city over very short time periods of minutes and hours for data from the London Underground. Our second application scales up these models from districts and cities to the nation, and we demonstrate how flows of people from home to work and vice versa define cities and related settlements at much coarser scales. We contrast this approach with more disaggregate, individual studies of flow systems in cities that we consider an essential complement to the ideas presented here.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Interdisciplinary approaches for uncovering the impacts of architecture on collective behaviour’.

Highlights

  • We argue here that despite the focus in cities on location and place, it is increasingly clear that a requisite understanding of how cities evolve and change depends on a thorough understanding of human movements at aggregate scales where we can observe emergent patterns in networks and flow systems

  • We argue that the location of activities must be understood as summations or syntheses of movements or flows, with a much clearer link between flows, activities and the networks that carry and support them

  • We introduce a generic class of models that enable aggregated flows of many different kinds of social and economic activity, ranging from the journey to work to email traffic, to be predicted using ideas from discrete choice theory in economics which has analogies to gravitation

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Summary

Introduction: defining movement

Patterns of human movement have been explored from classical times but it required a revolution in technologies which began with the industrial revolution to raise their prominence to systematic study. The city is a many-facetted object or system of study and it is unlikely that there will ever be any comprehensive theory that relates all its dimensions It is the example of a complex system par excellence [5] where a complete explanation of its form and function depends on many disciplines and scientific approaches. We do not have a good theory of how the many different kinds of patterns displayed at different scales can be integrated in a consistent set of explanations we consider the purpose of this special issue of the journal is to assemble many different perspectives on such individual and collective phenomena; and we assume that this issue will enable readers to get some sense of the challenges in integrating different viewpoints and charting a way forward which enables us to integrate these ideas more effectively

Locations and interactions
Representing flows and networks
Movement in the high-frequency city
Fkij k
Movement in the low-frequency city
Next steps: challenges in simulating aggregate movement
Findings
22. Barbosa-Filho H et al 2017 Human Mobility

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