Department of Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA.
Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501, USA.
Phys Rev E. 2019 Sep;100(3-1):032306. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.100.032306.
Urban outputs often scale superlinearly with city population. A difficulty in understanding the mechanism of this phenomenon is that different outputs differ considerably in their scaling behaviors. Here, we formulate a physics-based model for the origin of superlinear scaling in urban outputs by treating human interaction as a random process. Our model suggests that the increased likelihood of finding required collaborations in a larger population can explain this superlinear scaling, which our model predicts to be non-power-law. Moreover, the extent of superlinearity should be greater for activities that require more collaborators. We test this model using a novel dataset for seven crime types and find strong support.
城市产出通常与城市人口呈超线性增长。理解这一现象的机制存在困难,因为不同的产出在其增长行为上存在显著差异。在这里,我们通过将人类互动视为随机过程,为城市产出中超线性增长的起源制定了一个基于物理的模型。我们的模型表明,在更大的人口中找到所需合作的可能性增加可以解释这种超线性增长,我们的模型预测这种增长是非幂律的。此外,对于需要更多合作伙伴的活动,超线性程度应该更大。我们使用七种犯罪类型的新数据集来检验这个模型,发现了有力的支持。