首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>PLoS Computational Biology >Evaluating Spatial Interaction Models for Regional Mobility in Sub-Saharan Africa
【2h】

Evaluating Spatial Interaction Models for Regional Mobility in Sub-Saharan Africa

机译:评估撒哈拉以南非洲区域流动的空间互动模型

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。

摘要

Simple spatial interaction models of human mobility based on physical laws have been used extensively in the social, biological, and physical sciences, and in the study of the human dynamics underlying the spread of disease. Recent analyses of commuting patterns and travel behavior in high-income countries have led to the suggestion that these models are highly generalizable, and as a result, gravity and radiation models have become standard tools for describing population mobility dynamics for infectious disease epidemiology. Communities in Sub-Saharan Africa may not conform to these models, however; physical accessibility, availability of transport, and cost of travel between locations may be variable and severely constrained compared to high-income settings, informal labor movements rather than regular commuting patterns are often the norm, and the rise of mega-cities across the continent has important implications for travel between rural and urban areas. Here, we first review how infectious disease frameworks incorporate human mobility on different spatial scales and use anonymous mobile phone data from nearly 15 million individuals to analyze the spatiotemporal dynamics of the Kenyan population. We find that gravity and radiation models fail in systematic ways to capture human mobility measured by mobile phones; both severely overestimate the spatial spread of travel and perform poorly in rural areas, but each exhibits different characteristic patterns of failure with respect to routes and volumes of travel. Thus, infectious disease frameworks that rely on spatial interaction models are likely to misrepresent population dynamics important for the spread of disease in many African populations.
机译:基于物理定律的人类活动的简单空间相互作用模型已广泛用于社会,生物学和物理科学,以及用于研究疾病传播基础的人类动力学。最近对高收入国家通勤模式和出行行为的分析表明,这些模型具有高度通用性,因此,重力和辐射模型已成为描述传染病流行病学人口迁移动态的标准工具。但是,撒哈拉以南非洲地区的社区可能不符合这些模式。与高收入环境相比,身体的可到达性,交通的便利性以及地点之间的旅行成本可能是可变的,并且受到严重限制,非正式的劳动力流动而非常规的通勤方式通常是常态,并且整个非洲大陆的大城市崛起对城乡之间旅行的重要意义。在这里,我们首先回顾传染病框架如何在不同的空间尺度上融合人类的流动性,并使用来自将近1500万个人的匿名手机数据来分析肯尼亚人口的时空动态。我们发现引力和辐射模型无法系统地捕获通过手机测量的人类移动性。两者都严重高估了旅行的空间分布,在农村地区的表现也很差,但每种旅行方式和旅行量都表现出不同的失败特征。因此,依赖于空间相互作用模型的传染病框架很可能会曲解对许多非洲人口中疾病传播重要的人口动态。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
代理获取

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号