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Generalized radiation model for human migration. | LitMetric

Generalized radiation model for human migration.

Sci Rep

Analytics, Computing and Complex Systems Laboratory (ACCeSs@AIM), Asian Institute of Management, 123 Paseo De Roxas, Makati City, 1229, Philippines.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The radiation model is a key tool for predicting human migration, focusing on location attractiveness influenced by distance and neighboring areas.
  • The model traditionally uses population as a measure of attractiveness, but this approach may overlook non-economic factors, especially in developing countries.
  • By extending the radiation model to include amenities, the improved model shows a 10.3% increase in prediction accuracy and suggests that amenities can effectively encapsulate the economic opportunities typically represented by population data.

Article Abstract

One of the main problems in the study of human migration is predicting how many people will migrate from one place to another. An important model used for this problem is the radiation model for human migration, which models locations as attractors whose attractiveness is moderated by distance as well as attractiveness of neighboring locations. In the model, the measure used for attractiveness is population which is a proxy for economic opportunities and jobs. However, this may not be valid, for example, in developing countries, and fails to take into account people migrating for non-economic reasons such as quality of life. Here, we extend the radiation model to include the number of amenities (offices, schools, leisure places, etc.) as features aside from population. We find that the generalized radiation model outperforms the radiation model by as much as 10.3% relative improvement in mean absolute percentage error based on actual census data five years apart. The best performing model does not even include population information which suggests that amenities already include the information that we get from population. The generalized radiation model provides a measure of feature importance thus presenting another avenue for investigating the effect of amenities on human migration.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8609035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-02109-1DOI Listing

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