Litcius/Paper detail

Modular gateway-ness connectivity and structural core organization in maritime network science

Mengqiao Xu, Qian Pan, Alessandro Muscoloni, Haoxiang Xia, Carlo Vittorio Cannistraci

2020Nature Communications94 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Around 80% of global trade by volume is transported by sea, and thus the maritime transportation system is fundamental to the world economy. To better exploit new international shipping routes, we need to understand the current ones and their complex systems association with international trade. We investigate the structure of the global liner shipping network (GLSN), finding it is an economic small-world network with a trade-off between high transportation efficiency and low wiring cost. To enhance understanding of this trade-off, we examine the modular segregation of the GLSN; we study provincial-, connector-hub ports and propose the definition of gateway-hub ports, using three respective structural measures. The gateway-hub structural-core organization seems a salient property of the GLSN, which proves importantly associated to network integration and function in realizing the cargo transportation of international trade. This finding offers new insights into the GLSN's structural organization complexity and its relevance to international trade.

Topics & Concepts

Modular designExploitSalientFunction (biology)Computer scienceGlobal networkRelevance (law)Modularity (biology)Flow networkNetwork structureCore (optical fiber)Transport networkNetwork scienceComplex networkBusinessAssociation (psychology)Core networkProperty (philosophy)Distributed computingSystems engineeringWorld tradeTransport engineeringVolume (thermodynamics)International shippingNetwork theoryMaritime Ports and LogisticsComplex Network Analysis TechniquesGlobal Urban Networks and Dynamics