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Human mobility patterns are associated with experienced partisan segregation in US metropolitan areas
by
Li, Zhi
, Cheng, Siwei
, Jiang, Wenhao
, Zhang, Yongjun
in
639/705/1042
/ 704/158/858
/ 704/844/2787
/ Black or African American
/ Global positioning systems
/ GPS
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Humans
/ Income
/ Metropolitan areas
/ Mobility
/ multidisciplinary
/ Poverty
/ Public transportation
/ Residence Characteristics
/ Residential areas
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Segregation
/ Social Environment
/ Social Segregation
/ United States
/ Urban Population
2023
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Human mobility patterns are associated with experienced partisan segregation in US metropolitan areas
by
Li, Zhi
, Cheng, Siwei
, Jiang, Wenhao
, Zhang, Yongjun
in
639/705/1042
/ 704/158/858
/ 704/844/2787
/ Black or African American
/ Global positioning systems
/ GPS
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Humans
/ Income
/ Metropolitan areas
/ Mobility
/ multidisciplinary
/ Poverty
/ Public transportation
/ Residence Characteristics
/ Residential areas
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Segregation
/ Social Environment
/ Social Segregation
/ United States
/ Urban Population
2023
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Do you wish to request the book?
Human mobility patterns are associated with experienced partisan segregation in US metropolitan areas
by
Li, Zhi
, Cheng, Siwei
, Jiang, Wenhao
, Zhang, Yongjun
in
639/705/1042
/ 704/158/858
/ 704/844/2787
/ Black or African American
/ Global positioning systems
/ GPS
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Humans
/ Income
/ Metropolitan areas
/ Mobility
/ multidisciplinary
/ Poverty
/ Public transportation
/ Residence Characteristics
/ Residential areas
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Segregation
/ Social Environment
/ Social Segregation
/ United States
/ Urban Population
2023
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Human mobility patterns are associated with experienced partisan segregation in US metropolitan areas
Journal Article
Human mobility patterns are associated with experienced partisan segregation in US metropolitan areas
2023
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Overview
Partisan sorting in residential environments is an enduring feature of contemporary American politics, but little research has examined partisan segregation individuals experience in activity spaces through their daily activities. Relying on advances in spatial computation and global positioning system data on everyday mobility flows collected from smartphones, we measure experienced partisan segregation in two ways:
place-level partisan segregation
based on the partisan composition of its daily visitors and
community-level experienced partisan segregation
based on the segregation level of places visited by its residents. We find that partisan segregation experienced in places varies across different geographic areas, location types, and time periods. Moreover, partisan segregation is distinct from experienced segregation by race and income. We also find that partisan segregation individuals experience is relatively lower when they visit places beyond their residential areas, but partisan segregation in residential space and activity space is strongly correlated. Residents living in predominantly black, liberal, low-income, non-immigrant, more public transit-dependent, and central city communities tend to experience a higher level of partisan segregation.
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