%0 Journal Article %A Demšar, Urška %A Reades, Jonathan %A Manley, Ed %A Batty, Michael %D 2017 %T Revisiting the Past: Replicating Fifty-Year-Old Flow Analysis Using Contemporary Taxi Flow Data %U https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Revisiting_the_Past_Replicating_Fifty-Year-Old_Flow_Analysis_Using_Contemporary_Taxi_Flow_Data/5634943 %R 10.6084/m9.figshare.5634943.v1 %2 https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/9815719 %K comparative spatial analysis %K movement analytics %K principal component analysis (PCA) %K quantitative method development %K replication %K 比较空间分析 %K 移动分析 %K 主成分分析 (PCA) %K 计量方法发展 %K 复製。 %K análisis espacial comparativo %K analíticas del movimiento %K análisis de componentes principales (PCA) %K desarrollo del método cuantitativo %K réplica %X

Over sixty years ago, geography began its so-called quantitative revolution, where for the first time statistical methods were used to explain the spatial nature of geographic phenomena. Computers made some of this possible, but their limited power did not allow for more than relatively small analytic explorations and consequently many of these earlier ideas are now buried in the mists of time. Here we attempt to replicate one of these early analyses using taxi flow data collected in 1962 and originally used by Goddard (1970; then at the London School of Economics) to extract functional regions within London's city center. Our experiment attempts to replicate Goddard's methodology on a modern taxi flow data set, acquired through Global Positioning System tracking. We initially expected that our analysis would be directly comparable with Goddard's, potentially providing insights into temporal change in the spatial structure of the city core. Attempts at replicating the original analysis have proved enormously difficult, however, for several reasons, including the many subjective choices made by the researcher in articulating and using the original method and the specific characteristics of contemporary taxi flow data. We therefore opt to replicate Goddard's approach as closely and as logically as possible and to fill in gaps based on statistically informed choices. We have also run the analysis on two spatial scales—Central London and a wider area—to explore how scales of analyses that were beyond the capacities of Goddard's early computations also help to shape our understanding of the results he obtained.

%I Taylor & Francis