[HTML][HTML] Measuring Chinese mobility behaviour during COVID-19 using geotagged social media data

K Zhu, Z Cheng, J Wang - Humanities and Social Sciences …, 2024 - nature.com
COVID-19 caused widespread disruption to normal lives and human activities. In China, the
mobility behaviour response to the COVID-19 pandemic at the intra-city and population …

[HTML][HTML] Social determinants of spatial inequalities in COVID-19 outcomes across England: A multiscale geographically weighted regression analysis

EK Morasae, DW Derbyshire, P Amini, T Ebrahimi - SSM-population health, 2024 - Elsevier
A variety of factors are associated with greater COVID-19 morbidity or mortality, due to how
these factors influence exposure to (in the case of morbidity) or severity of (in the case of …

Reduced mobility? Urban exodus? Medium-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on internal population movements in Latin American countries

F Rowe, C Cabrera-Arnau, M González-Leonardo… - arXiv, 2023 - pure.iiasa.ac.at
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the national systems of population movement
around the world. Existing work has focused on countries of the Global North and restricted …

Spatiotemporal gender differences in urban vibrancy

T Collins, R Di Clemente… - … and Planning B …, 2023 - journals.sagepub.com
Urban vibrancy is the dynamic activity of humans in urban locations. It can vary with urban
features and the opportunities for human interactions, but it might also differ according to the …

Spreading and Epidemic Interventions-Effects of Network Structure and Dynamics

AK Rizi - 2024 - aaltodoc.aalto.fi
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the critical importance of understanding epidemic
dynamics, particularly the significant gaps in our knowledge that need addressing to better …

Dynamic predictability and spatio-temporal contexts in human mobility

B Poudyal, D Pacheco, M Oliveira, Z Chen… - arXiv preprint arXiv …, 2022 - arxiv.org
Human travelling behaviours are markedly regular, to a large extent, predictable, and mostly
driven by biological necessities (\eg sleeping, eating) and social constructs (\eg school …