Living in a pandemic: adaptation of individual mobility and social
activity in the US
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2107.12235v2
- Date: Tue, 17 Aug 2021 13:18:43 GMT
- Title: Living in a pandemic: adaptation of individual mobility and social
activity in the US
- Authors: Lorenzo Lucchini, Simone Centellegher, Luca Pappalardo, Riccardo
Gallotti, Filippo Privitera, Bruno Lepri and Marco De Nadai
- Abstract summary: We study how individuals adapted their daily movements and person-to-person contact patterns over time in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the NPIs.
We find that local interventions did not just impact the number of visits to different venues but also how people experience them.
Individuals spend less time in venues, preferring simpler and more predictable routines and reducing person-to-person contact activities.
- Score: 4.311304158111146
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), aimed at reducing the diffusion
of the COVID-19 pandemic, has dramatically influenced our behaviour in everyday
life. In this work, we study how individuals adapted their daily movements and
person-to-person contact patterns over time in response to the COVID-19
pandemic and the NPIs. We leverage longitudinal GPS mobility data of hundreds
of thousands of anonymous individuals in four US states and empirically show
the dramatic disruption in people's life. We find that local interventions did
not just impact the number of visits to different venues but also how people
experience them. Individuals spend less time in venues, preferring simpler and
more predictable routines and reducing person-to-person contact activities.
Moreover, we show that the stringency of interventions alone does explain the
number and duration of visits to venues: individual patterns of visits seem to
be influenced by the local severity of the pandemic and a risk adaptation
factor, which increases the people's mobility regardless of the stringency of
interventions.
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