2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166083
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An Economic Geography of the United States: From Commutes to Megaregions

Abstract: The emergence in the United States of large-scale “megaregions” centered on major metropolitan areas is a phenomenon often taken for granted in both scholarly studies and popular accounts of contemporary economic geography. This paper uses a data set of more than 4,000,000 commuter flows as the basis for an empirical approach to the identification of such megaregions. We compare a method which uses a visual heuristic for understanding areal aggregation to a method which uses a computational partitioning algori… Show more

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Cited by 126 publications
(111 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…By adding or removing data layers, the approach presented in this paper can easily be extended or altered while retaining the universal applicability: The likelihood that a particular part of the Earth's surface belongs to an urban corridor (or any other concept for a constructed territorial space) is determined by the amount of layers which yield positive results. Commuter patterns as well as airline, mobile phone or collective sensing data (e.g., [94][95][96][97][98]) would provide further insight into the functional connectedness of cities-maybe even adding a space of flows perspective to the 'space of place' logic applied in this study-however these are not available globally and consistently at this stage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By adding or removing data layers, the approach presented in this paper can easily be extended or altered while retaining the universal applicability: The likelihood that a particular part of the Earth's surface belongs to an urban corridor (or any other concept for a constructed territorial space) is determined by the amount of layers which yield positive results. Commuter patterns as well as airline, mobile phone or collective sensing data (e.g., [94][95][96][97][98]) would provide further insight into the functional connectedness of cities-maybe even adding a space of flows perspective to the 'space of place' logic applied in this study-however these are not available globally and consistently at this stage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Spatial socioeconomic integration has been operationalized variously. For example, functional economic megaregions have been identified based on webs of journey‐to‐work trip‐making (Dash Nelson, and Rae ).…”
Section: Methods For Regional Partitioning and Delineationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Geometric compactness does not necessarily ensure socioeconomically integrated districts that preserve racial/ethnic balance in representation (Morrill ; Williams 2005). The extent to which districts reflect the distribution of people across the landscape is far more important than the shape of districts’ outer boundaries (Niemi et al ).…”
Section: Methods For Regional Partitioning and Delineationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Commuters who travel more than 100km (distance between population weighted centroids) are also ignored to remove the effect of telecommuters or supercommuters. Such preprocessing was also done in Nelson and Rae (2016). The resulting network has 3,091 nodes and 17,222 edges.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%