Quartz has an interesting piece on why most Germans prefer renting instead of buying their homes. (via Simon Kuestenmache). The data in this chart is a bit outdated but homeownership rate was still relatively low in Germany in 2013, at 43%. In Brazil, this rate was 75% in the year 2011.
Structured Procrastination on Cities, Transport Policy, Spatial Analysis, Demography, R
Monday, August 29, 2016
Friday, August 26, 2016
Most popular R packages in the tweetosphere
David Robinson has done a great work scraping twitter data to find the most popular packages in R based on the #7FavPackages hashtag.
My personal take: a lot of people don't know what they're missing out with the package data.table, which I would place in top1 in my list.
In short, data.table has extremely simple syntax and unprecedented speed when working with large datasets (it takes me just a few seconds to generate several aggregated columns from a dataset with ~200 million rows).
Most popular #rstats packages in tweetosphere, by @drob https://t.co/NIWPsJyqxD My take: #rdatatable should be top1 pic.twitter.com/cB5kdk2lDg— Urban Demographics (@UrbanDemog) 26 August 2016
Thursday, August 25, 2016
Top 10 Craziest Intersections
Oh, humans and our monstrous creativity to deal with self-inflicted problems.
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Assorted Links
- 1% of real estate owners in Sao Paulo concentrate 45% of all property value in the city [PORT]
- How Residential Building Restrictions Affect political Partisanship, via Tyler Cowen
- Mesmerizing Milky Way mirrored in Bolivia's salt flats
- Driverless vehicles will soon start to be on the roads of Pittsburgh with driverless Uber and Helsinki with driverless busses. Cautionary note on why this hype on driverless vehicles has gotten totally out of sync with reality (and here)
- Ironically, the idea of the suburban shopping center was created by a socialist, ht Leo Monasterio
- For every Starbucks in the US, there are 6 gun dealers
- Between 1928 and 1948, the Summer Olympic Games also had "art competitions", including a town planning category, ht Tamara and Leo Monasterio
- Amazing pictures of what happened to Fukushima Exclusion Zone
- How classical philosophy advanced ,via Ian Duhig
Monday, August 22, 2016
Monocentric and Polycentric cities as a continuum scale
In 2013, some colleagues and I published a paper in which we proposed the Urban Centrality Index (UCI). This index measures the centrality of a defined area (city, metropolitan area, region, country etc) considering a continuum scale that varies from extreme monocentric to extreme polycentric, and it can be applied to the spatial distribution of population, jobs, hospitals, economic activities in general etc.
I have recently shared on Github the script in R we have used to calculate UCI in our paper as well as the published study and working-paper versions. In case you're interested, here is the paper.
Pereira, R. H. M., Nadalin, V., Monasterio, L., & Albuquerque, P. H. M. (2013). Urban Centrality: A Simple Index. Geographical Analysis, 45(1), 77–89. doi:10.1111/gean.12002
Abstract
This study introduces a new measure of urban centrality. The proposed urban centrality index (UCI) constitutes an extension to the spatial separation index. Urban structure should be more accurately analyzed when considering a centrality scale (varying from extreme monocentricity to extreme polycentricity) than when considering a binary variable (monocentric or polycentric). The proposed index controls for differences in size and shape of the geographic areas for which data are available, and can be calculated using different variables such as employment and population densities, or trip generation rates. The properties of the index are illustrated with simulated artificial data sets and are compared with other similar measures proposed in the existing literature. The index is then applied to the urban structure of four metropolitan areas: Pittsburgh and Los Angeles in the United States; São Paulo, Brazil; and Paris, France. The index is compared with other traditional spatial agglomeration measures, such as global and local Moran's I, and density gradient estimations.
Thursday, August 18, 2016
Rio in time-lapse 8K
Joe Capra (aka SCIENTIFANTASTIC) has one of the most seriously awesome time-lapse videos in high definition. Since were in Olympics season, here are two of his videos of Rio.
RIO - 8K from SCIENTIFANTASTIC on Vimeo.
And
ps. Here are some other great time-lapse videos we've posted before
Best viewed in HD, fullscreen
RIO - 8K from SCIENTIFANTASTIC on Vimeo.
And
ps. Here are some other great time-lapse videos we've posted before
Monday, August 15, 2016
Don't trust summary statistics
Always visualize your data! Wise words, by Alberto Cairo
Don't trust summary statistics. Always visualize your data first https://t.co/63RxirsTuY pic.twitter.com/5j94Dw9UAf— Alberto Cairo (@albertocairo) 15 August 2016
Sunday, August 14, 2016
Playing around with (messy) GPS data of the bus routes in Rio using R
click on the image to enlarge it
Thursday, August 11, 2016
R Links
- Nice gallery with ggplot2 extensions
- Analysing spatial point patterns in R based on package spatstat
- A data package with a collection of 10 years (2006 - 2015) of Beer Statistics in the US, by Jasmine Dumas
- Some really useful R cheat sheets
- Translating between R and SQL: the basics
- Beatles Songs by Sentiment via Arthur Charpentier
- Online book: Using R for Introductory Econometrics
- How long does it take from question submit to 1st answer on StackOverflow? by boB Rudis
Tuesday, August 9, 2016
Air quality in world cities by hour of the day
This comes from The Economist's Daily chart, where you can find other indicators and more information on the methodology (more here).
click on the image to enlarge it
credit: The Economist's Daily chart
Sunday, August 7, 2016
Urban transformations in the run-up to the Rio Olympics
Laris Karklis and colleagues have written a nice piece for the Washing Post, using satellite images to show some of the transformations in Rio to accommodate the Olympic sports venues.
The eviction of 77,000 favela residents to open space for the infrastructure investments in Rio, however, is also an important but less visible part of the city transformations. The guys at Rio on Watch (twitter) have been doing a good work in covering the negative impacts of the Olympics.
Apart from that, there has been an overload of interesting articles to read about the Olympics in Rio. For articles in English, I've been enjoying following Alex Cuadros, Brasil Wire, Juliana Barbassa, Simon Romero and Jonathan Watts.
UPDATE: Vila Autodromo is one of the most affected Favelas by the Olympics as it sits literally next to the Olympic Park. The LA Times have just published a before-after photo of Vila Autodromo, showing how a big part of the favela has been transformed into a parking lot.
UPDATE: Vila Autodromo is one of the most affected Favelas by the Olympics as it sits literally next to the Olympic Park. The LA Times have just published a before-after photo of Vila Autodromo, showing how a big part of the favela has been transformed into a parking lot.
credit: Washing Post
Thursday, August 4, 2016
Next time you find yourself "too busy" to write ....
... remember that Barack Obama published a paper... in a high impact journal! (ht to my friend Nicolas Raab)
Obama, B*. (2016). United States health care reform: progress to date and next steps. JAMA. 316(5):525-532. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.9797.
* Author Affiliations: President of the United States, Washington, DC.
ps. I must confess I'm not the greatest example when it comes to abiding to deadlines though . Sorry supervisors !
Obama, B*. (2016). United States health care reform: progress to date and next steps. JAMA. 316(5):525-532. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.9797.
* Author Affiliations: President of the United States, Washington, DC.
ps. I must confess I'm not the greatest example when it comes to abiding to deadlines though . Sorry supervisors !