Quantifying the relationship between mobility patterns and socioeconomic status of dockless bike-sharing users

被引:4
作者
Yang, Yu [1 ]
Gao, Tianli [1 ,2 ]
Xu, Zikun [1 ]
Zhang, Yongping [3 ,4 ]
Liu, Chenxin [1 ]
Shang, Fan [1 ]
Li, Ruiqi [1 ]
机构
[1] Beijing Univ Chem Technol, Coll Informat Sci & Technol, UrbanNet Lab, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China
[2] Xian Mingde Inst Technol, Sch Informat Engn, Xian 710124, Peoples R China
[3] Zhejiang Univ, Sch Publ Affairs, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China
[4] Zhejiang Univ, ZJU CMZJ Joint Lab Data Intelligence & Urban Futur, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China
来源
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MODERN PHYSICS C | 2024年 / 35卷 / 09期
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Cycling mobility; dockless sharing bikes; socioeconomic status; green and sustainable transportation; ATTITUDES; SINGAPORE; DENSITY; GROWTH; MODEL;
D O I
10.1142/S0129183124501080
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
Cycling is among the healthiest, greenest, and most affordable means of transportation for a better future city, but mobility patterns of cyclists with different income have rarely been studied due to the limitation of data availability. Newly emergent dockless bike-sharing platforms that record detailed trip information provide us a unique opportunity. Attributing to its better usage flexibility and accessibility, dockless bike-sharing is booming over the past few years worldwide and reviving the cycling fashion in cities. In this work, by exploiting massive platform-collected trip records in four diversified Chinese cities, we reveal that individual mobility patterns, including radius of gyration and average travel distance, are similar among the users with different income, indicating that human beings all follow similar physical rules. However, collective mobility patterns, in terms of average range and diversity of visitation, and commuting direction, exhibit different behaviors and spatial patterns across income categories. Hotspot locations that attract a high volume of cycling activities are quite different over groups, and locations with either a lower or higher income level have a relatively low user ratio. Cyclists from lower income groups are inclined to visit less flourishing locations across all four cities, and have a higher fraction to commute toward the city center in larger cities and away from the city center in smaller cities. Middle income groups of cyclists generally have a higher visitation diversity except in Shanghai. Our findings would be helpful on designing better promotion strategies for dockless bike-sharing platforms and toward the transition to a more inclusive and sustainable transportation.
引用
收藏
页数:27
相关论文
共 60 条
[1]   Employment suburbanisation, reverse commuting and travel behaviour by residents of the central city in the Paris metropolitan area [J].
Aguilera, Anne ;
Wenglenski, Sandrine ;
Proulhac, Laurent .
TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2009, 43 (07) :685-691
[2]   Origin-destination trips by purpose and time of day inferred from mobile phone data [J].
Alexander, Lauren ;
Jiang, Shan ;
Murga, Mikel ;
Gonzalez, Marta C. .
TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART C-EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES, 2015, 58 :240-250
[3]   Assessing Refugees' Integration via Spatio-Temporal Similarities of Mobility and Calling Behaviors [J].
Alfeo, Antonio Luca ;
Cimino, Mario G. C. A. ;
Lepri, Bruno ;
Pentland, Alexander Sandy ;
Vaglini, Gigliola .
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SYSTEMS, 2019, 6 (04) :726-738
[4]  
[Anonymous], WORLD URBANIZATION P
[5]   Uncovering the socioeconomic facets of human mobility [J].
Barbosa, Hugo ;
Hazarie, Surendra ;
Dickinson, Brian ;
Bassolas, Aleix ;
Frank, Adam ;
Kautz, Henry ;
Sadilek, Adam ;
Ramasco, Jose J. ;
Ghoshal, Gourab .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2021, 11 (01)
[6]   Human mobility: Models and applications [J].
Barbosa, Hugo ;
Barthelemy, Marc ;
Ghoshal, Gourab ;
James, Charlotte R. ;
Lenormand, Maxime ;
Louail, Thomas ;
Menezes, Ronaldo ;
Ramasco, Jose J. ;
Simini, Filippo ;
Tomasini, Marcello .
PHYSICS REPORTS-REVIEW SECTION OF PHYSICS LETTERS, 2018, 734 :1-74
[7]   Hierarchical organization of urban mobility and its connection with city livability [J].
Bassolas, Aleix ;
Barbosa-Filho, Hugo ;
Dickinson, Brian ;
Dotiwalla, Xerxes ;
Eastham, Paul ;
Gallotti, Riccardo ;
Ghoshal, Gourab ;
Gipson, Bryant ;
Hazarie, Surendra A. ;
Kautz, Henry ;
Kucuktunc, Onur ;
Lieber, Allison ;
Sadilek, Adam ;
Ramasco, Jose J. .
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2019, 10 (1)
[8]   The Origins of Scaling in Cities [J].
Bettencourt, Luis M. A. .
SCIENCE, 2013, 340 (6139) :1438-1441
[9]   The scaling laws of human travel [J].
Brockmann, D ;
Hufnagel, L ;
Geisel, T .
NATURE, 2006, 439 (7075) :462-465
[10]   E-scooter sharing to serve short-distance transit trips: A Singapore case [J].
Cao, Zhejing ;
Zhang, Xiaohu ;
Chua, Kelman ;
Yu, Honghai ;
Zhao, Jinhua .
TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2021, 147 :177-196