English

Multiscale core-periphery structure in a global liner shipping network

Physics and Society 2019-01-29 v2

Abstract

Maritime transport accounts for a majority of trades in volume, of which 70% in value is carried by container ships that transit regular routes on fixed schedules in the ocean. In the present paper, we analyse a data set of global liner shipping as a network of ports. In particular, we construct the network of the ports as the one-mode projection of a bipartite network composed of ports and ship routes. Like other transportation networks, global liner shipping networks may have core-periphery structure, where a core and a periphery are groups of densely and sparsely interconnected nodes, respectively. Core-periphery structure may have practical implications for understanding the robustness, efficiency and uneven development of international transportation systems. We develop an algorithm to detect core-periphery pairs in a network, which allows one to find core and peripheral nodes on different scales and uses a configuration model that accounts for the fact that the network is obtained by the one-mode projection of a bipartite network. We also found that most ports are core (as opposed to peripheral) ports and that ports in some countries in Europe, America and Asia belong to a global core-periphery pair across different scales, whereas ports in other countries do not.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1808.04549,
  title  = {Multiscale core-periphery structure in a global liner shipping network},
  author = {Sadamori Kojaku and Mengqiao Xu and Haoxiang Xia and Naoki Masuda},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1808.04549},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

22 pages, 10 figures and 1 table

R2 v1 2026-06-23T03:33:02.916Z