Global Urban Studies Program / Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences / School of Planning, Design and Construction, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America.
Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Dec 21;15(12):e0243501. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0243501. eCollection 2020.
Only a handful of studies have leveraged agent-based models (ABMs) to examine public health outcomes and policy interventions associated with uneven urban food environments. While providing keen insights about the role of ABMs in studying urban food environments, these studies underutilize real-world data on individual behavior in their models. This study provides a unique contribution to the ABM and food access literature by utilizing survey data to develop an empirically-rich spatially-explicit ABM of food access. This model is used to simulate and scrutinize individual travel behavior associated with accessing food in low-income neighborhoods experiencing disinvestment in Detroit (Michigan), U.S. In particular, the relationship between trip frequencies, mode of travel, store choice, and distances traveled among individuals grouped into strata based on selected sociodemographic characteristics, including household income and age, is examined. Results reveal a diversified picture of not only how income and age shape food shopping travel but also the different thresholds of tolerance for non-motorized travel to stores. Younger and poorer population subgroups have a higher propensity to utilize non-motorized travel for shopping than older and wealthier subgroups. While all groups tend to travel considerable distances outside their immediate local food environment, different sociodemographic groups maintain unique spatial patterns of grocery-shopping behavior throughout the city and the suburbs. Overall, these results challenge foundational tenets in urban planning and design, regarding the specific characteristics necessary in the built environment to facilitate accessibility to urban amenities, such as grocery stores. In neighborhoods experiencing disinvestment, sociodemographic conditions play a more important role than the built environment in shaping food accessibility and ultimately travel behavior.
只有少数研究利用基于代理的模型 (ABM) 来研究与城市食品环境不均衡相关的公共卫生结果和政策干预。虽然这些研究为 ABM 在研究城市食品环境方面提供了深刻的见解,但它们在模型中对个体行为的实际数据利用不足。本研究通过利用调查数据来开发一个具有丰富实证数据的、空间明确的食品获取 ABM,为 ABM 和食品获取文献做出了独特贡献。该模型用于模拟和审查与底特律(密歇根州,美国)经历投资减少的低收入社区的食品获取相关的个体旅行行为。特别是,考察了基于选定社会人口特征(包括家庭收入和年龄)分组的个体的旅行频率、出行方式、商店选择和旅行距离之间的关系。结果不仅揭示了收入和年龄如何塑造食品购物旅行的多样化图景,还揭示了个体对非机动交通前往商店的容忍度的不同阈值。年轻和贫困的人群比年老和富裕的人群更倾向于使用非机动交通进行购物。尽管所有群体都倾向于在其直接的当地食品环境之外旅行相当长的距离,但不同的社会人口群体在整个城市和郊区都保持着独特的杂货购物行为的空间模式。总的来说,这些结果挑战了城市规划和设计的基本原理,即关于在建筑环境中促进城市设施(如杂货店)可达性所需的具体特征。在经历投资减少的社区中,社会人口条件在塑造食品可及性和最终旅行行为方面比建筑环境发挥更重要的作用。