Leveraging Newspapers to Understand Urban Issues: A Longitudinal Analysis of Urban Shrinkage in Detroit.
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Keywords: Natural Language Processing, Topic Modeling, Newspapers, Text Data, Urban Shrinkage, Urban Analytics.
Abstract Type: Paper Abstract
Authors:
Na(Richard) Jiang University at Buffalo
Andrew Crooks University at Buffalo
Abstract
Today we are awash with data especially when it comes to studying cities from a diverse data ecosystem ranging from demographic to that of remotely sensed imagery and social media. This has led to the growth of geographical data science and urban analytics providing new ways to conduct quantitative research within cities. One area that has seen significant growth is that of using natural language processing techniques on text data from social media to explore various issues relating to urban morphology. However, social media only provides limited insights when dealing with longer-term urban phenomena, such as the growth and shrinkage of cities. This relates to the fact that social media is a relatively recent phenomenon compared to more longer-term urban problems that take decades to emerge. With respect to the longer-term coverage, newspapers which are increasingly becoming digitized provide the possibility to overcome the limitations of social media and provide insights over a timeframe that social media does not. To demonstrate the utilization of newspapers within urban analytics and to study longer-term urban issues, we present an advanced topic modeling technique (i.e., Bertopic) on a large number of newspaper articles spanning the years 1975 to 2021 to explore urban shrinkage in Detroit. Our topic modeling results reveal the insights related to Detroit's shrinkage can be linked to the side effects of economic recessions on Detroit's automobile industry, local employment status, and the housing market. As such, this work demonstrates the potential of utilizing newspaper articles to study long-term issues.
Leveraging Newspapers to Understand Urban Issues: A Longitudinal Analysis of Urban Shrinkage in Detroit.
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Paper Abstract
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Submitted By:
Na (Richard) Jiang University At Buffalo
naj060@icloud.com
This abstract is part of a session: Future Directions for Urban Analytics and City Science II: Trajectories and Change
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