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An Exploratory Multivariate Statistical Analysis to Assess Urban Diversity

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  • Lorena Salazar-Llano

    (Sustainability Measurement and Modeling Lab., Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya—Barcelona Tech, ESEIAAT, Campus Terrassa, Colom 1, 08222 Barcelona, Spain
    Centro de Ingeniería Avanzada, Investigación y Desarrollo—CIAID, Bogotá 111111, Colombia)

  • Marti Rosas-Casals

    (Sustainability Measurement and Modeling Lab., Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya—Barcelona Tech, ESEIAAT, Campus Terrassa, Colom 1, 08222 Barcelona, Spain
    ICREA—Complex Systems Lab., Universitat Pompeu Fabra (GRIB), 08003 Barcelona, Spain)

  • Maria Isabel Ortego

    (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya—Barcelona Tech, 08034 Barcelona, Spain)

Abstract

Understanding diversity in complex urban systems is fundamental in facing current and future sustainability challenges. In this article, we apply an exploratory multivariate statistical analysis (i.e., Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Multiple Factor Analysis (MFA)) to an urban system’s abstraction of the city’s functioning. Specifically, we relate the environmental, economical, and social characters of the city in a multivariate system of indicators by collecting measurements of those variables at the district scale. Statistical methods are applied to reduce the dimensionality of the multivariate dataset, such that, hidden relationships between the districts of the city are exposed. The methodology has been mainly designed to display diversity, being understood as differentiated attributes of the districts in their dimensionally-reduced description, and to measure it with Euclidean distances. Differentiated characters and distinctive functions of districts are identifiable in the exploratory analysis of a case study of Barcelona (Spain). The distances allow for the identification of clustered districts, as well as those that are separated, exemplifying dissimilarity. Moreover, the temporal dependency of the dataset reveals information about the district’s differentiation or homogenization trends between 2003 and 2015.

Suggested Citation

  • Lorena Salazar-Llano & Marti Rosas-Casals & Maria Isabel Ortego, 2019. "An Exploratory Multivariate Statistical Analysis to Assess Urban Diversity," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 11(14), pages 1-27, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:11:y:2019:i:14:p:3812-:d:247621
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