English

Great cities look small

Physics and Society 2015-07-21 v1 Social and Information Networks

Abstract

Great cities connect people; failed cities isolate people. Despite the fundamental importance of physical, face-to-face social-ties in the functioning of cities, these connectivity networks are not explicitly observed in their entirety. Attempts at estimating them often rely on unrealistic over-simplifications such as the assumption of spatial homogeneity. Here we propose a mathematical model of human interactions in terms of a local strategy of maximising the number of beneficial connections attainable under the constraint of limited individual travelling-time budgets. By incorporating census and openly-available online multi-modal transport data, we are able to characterise the connectivity of geometrically and topologically complex cities. Beyond providing a candidate measure of greatness, this model allows one to quantify and assess the impact of transport developments, population growth, and other infrastructure and demographic changes on a city. Supported by validations of GDP and HIV infection rates across United States metropolitan areas, we illustrate the effect of changes in local and city-wide connectivities by considering the economic impact of two contemporary inter- and intra-city transport developments in the United Kingdom: High Speed Rail 2 and London Crossrail. This derivation of the model suggests that the scaling of different urban indicators with population size has an explicitly mechanistic origin.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1507.05458,
  title  = {Great cities look small},
  author = {Aaron Sim and Sophia N Yaliraki and Mauricio Barahona and Michael P H Stumpf},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1507.05458},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

19 pages, 8 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:14:57.238Z