Anomalies of dwellers' collective geotagged behaviors in response to rainstorms: a case study of eight cities in China using smartphone location data
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Published:2019-10-08
Issue:10
Volume:19
Page:2169-2182
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ISSN:1684-9981
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Container-title:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Yi Jiawei,Du Yunyan,Liang Fuyuan,Pei Tao,Ma Ting,Zhou Chenghu
Abstract
Abstract. Understanding city residents' collective geotagged behaviors (CGTBs) in
response to hazards and emergency events is important in disaster
mitigation and emergency response. It is a challenge, if not impossible, to
directly observe CGTBs during a real-time matter. This study used the number
of location requests (NLR) data generated by smartphone users for a variety
of purposes such as map navigation, car hailing, and food delivery to
infer the dynamics of CGTBs in response to rainstorms in eight Chinese cities. We examined rainstorms, flooding, and NLR anomalies, as well as the
associations among them, in eight selected cities across mainland China.
The time series NLR clearly reflects cities' general diurnal rhythm, and the
total NLR is moderately correlated with the total city population. Anomalies
of the NLR were identified at both the city and grid scale using the Seasonal Hybrid Extreme Studentized Deviate (S-H-ESD) method. Analysis results demonstrated that the NLR anomalies at the city and
grid levels are well associated with rainstorms, indicating that city residents
request more location-based services (e.g., map navigation, car hailing, food delivery, etc.) when there is a rainstorm. However, the sensitivity of the city residents' collective geotagged behaviors in response to rainstorms varies in different cities as shown by different peak rainfall intensity
thresholds. Significant high peak rainfall intensity tends to trigger city
flooding, which leads to increased location-based requests as shown by
positive anomalies in the time series NLR.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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