4.7 Article

Mapping the Urban Population in Residential Neighborhoods by Integrating Remote Sensing and Crowdsourcing Data

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 12, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs12193235

Keywords

urban population estimation; remote sensing; fine-scale; census; dasymetric mapping; nighttime light

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41771203]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA23030102]

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Where urban dwellers live at a fine scale is essential for the planning of services and response to city emergencies. Currently, most existing population mapping approaches considered census data as observational data for specifying models. However, census data usually have low spatial resolution and low frequency. Here, we presented a framework for mapping populations in residential neighborhoods with 30 m spatial resolution with little dependency upon census data. The framework integrated remote sensing and crowdsourcing data. The observational populations and number of households at residential neighborhood scale were obtained from real-time crowdsourcing data instead of census data. We tested our framework in Beijing. We found that (1) the number of households from a real estate trade platform could be a good proxy for accurate observational population. (2) The accuracy of the mapping population in residential neighborhoods was reasonable. The mean absolute percentage error was 47.26% and the R-2 was 0.78. (3) Our framework shows great potential in mapping the population in real time. Our findings expand the knowledge in estimating urban population. In addition, the proposed framework and approach provide an effective means to quantify population distribution data for cities, which is particularly important for many of the cities worldwide lacking census data at the residential neighborhood scale.

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