Data from 350,000 Smartphones Visualize the Urban Segregation in Chile
Regardless of where you live or work or who you?re friends with, you usually move around the same neighbourhoods and streets of your city. It may be London, Santiago, Shanghai, or Moscow, but in any of these places, there are always districts you have never set a foot in. Have you ever considered how many ?cities? are within your own city"
Spatial segregation in Santiago, according to Dannemann, Sotomayor-Gómez and Samaniego research. Image © Teodoro Dannemann, Boris Sotomayor-Gómez y Horacio Samaniego
Regardless of where you live or work or who you?re friends with, you usually move around the same neighbourhoods and streets of your city. It may be London, Santiago, Shanghai, or Moscow, but in any of these places, there are always districts you have never set a foot in. Have you ever considered how many ?cities? are within your own city"A research article published in The Royal Society Open Science and signed by Chilean researchers utilizes big data to analyze and visualize urban segregation, delivering spatial tools that allow us to develop strategies in a city of many cities. "We know there are [social] bubbles in Santiago, Chile, and that therefore, there is segregation," says Teodoro Dannemann, co-author of the research paper The time geography of segregation during working hours, in a conversation with ArchDaily. ?We know that each person explores only a small fraction of the city, which is basically the home-work trajectory. This i...
Spatial segregation in Santiago, according to Dannemann, Sotomayor-Gómez and Samaniego research. Image © Teodoro Dannemann, Boris Sotomayor-Gómez y Horacio Samaniego
Regardless of where you live or work or who you?re friends with, you usually move around the same neighbourhoods and streets of your city. It may be London, Santiago, Shanghai, or Moscow, but in any of these places, there are always districts you have never set a foot in. Have you ever considered how many ?cities? are within your own city"A research article published in The Royal Society Open Science and signed by Chilean researchers utilizes big data to analyze and visualize urban segregation, delivering spatial tools that allow us to develop strategies in a city of many cities. "We know there are [social] bubbles in Santiago, Chile, and that therefore, there is segregation," says Teodoro Dannemann, co-author of the research paper The time geography of segregation during working hours, in a conversation with ArchDaily. ?We know that each person explores only a small fraction of the city, which is basically the home-work trajectory. This i...
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