Litcius/Paper detail

Quantifying COVID-19 recovery process from a human mobility perspective: An intra-city study in Wuhan

Xiaoyan Liu, Saini Yang, Xiao Huang, Rui An, Qiangqiang Xiong, Tao Ye

2022Cities17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought huge challenges to sustainable urban and community development. Although some recovery signals and patterns have been uncovered, the intra-city recovery process remains underexploited. This study proposes a comprehensive approach to quantify COVID-19 recovery leveraging fine-grained human mobility records. Taking Wuhan, a typical COVID-19 affected megacity in China, as the study area, we identify accurate recovery phases and select appropriate recovery functions in a data-driven manner. We observe that recovery characteristics regarding duration, amplitude, and velocity exhibit notable differences among urban blocks. We also notice that the recovery process under a one-wave outbreak lasts at least 84 days and has an S-shaped form best fitted with four-parameter Logistic functions. More than half of the recovery variance can be well explained and estimated by common variables from auxiliary data, including population, economic level, and built environments. Our study serves as a valuable reference that supports data-driven recovery quantification for COVID-19 and other crises.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)NoticeProcess (computing)MegacityEconomic recoveryVariance (accounting)PopulationEconometricsComputer sciencePandemicBusinessDemographyEconomicsMedicinePolitical scienceEconomyLawInfectious disease (medical specialty)SociologyOperating systemKeynesian economicsDiseasePathologyAccountingCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesHuman Mobility and Location-Based AnalysisUrban Transport and Accessibility