Country-wide mobility changes observed using mobile phone data during COVID-19 pandemic

Aug 10, 2020·
Georg Heiler
Georg Heiler
,
Tobias Reisch
,
Jan Hurt
,
Mohammad Forghani
,
Aida Omani
,
Allan Hanbury
,
Farid Karimipour
· 1 min read
Relative change of mean radius of gyration (ROG) for week of March 2nd and week of March 23rd measured at postcode level.
Abstract
In March 2020, the Austrian government introduced a widespread lock-down in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on subjective impressions and anecdotal evidence, Austrian public and private life came to a sudden halt. Here we assess the effect of the lock-down quantitatively for all regions in Austria and present an analysis of daily changes of human mobility throughout Austria using near-real-time anonymized mobile phone data. We describe an efficient data aggregation pipeline and analyze the mobility by quantifying mobile-phone traffic at specific point of interest (POI), analyzing individual trajectories and investigating the cluster structure of the origin-destination graph. We found a reduction of commuters at Viennese metro stations of over 80% and the number of devices with a radius of gyration of less than 500 m almost doubled. The results of studying crowd-movement behavior highlight considerable changes in the structure of mobility networks, revealed by a higher modularity and an increase from 12 to 20 detected communities. We demonstrate the relevance of mobility data for epidemiological studies by showing a significant correlation of the outflow from the town of Ischgl (an early COVID-19 hotspot) and the reported COVID-19 cases with an 8-day time lag. This research indicates that mobile phone usage data permits the moment-by-moment quantification of mobility behavior for a whole country. We emphasize the need to improve the availability of such data in anonymized form to empower rapid response to combat COVID-19 and future pandemics.
Type
Publication
Country-wide mobility changes observed using mobile phone data during COVID-19 pandemic

This publication is now published at the 2020 IEEE BigData conference.