Cities Are Physical Too: Using Computer Vision to Measure the Quality and Impact of Urban Appearance
Author(s)
Naik, Nikhil Deepak; Raskar, Ramesh; Hidalgo Ramaciotti, Cesar A.
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For social scientists, developing an empirical connection between the physical appearance of a city and the behavior and health of its inhabitants has proved challenging due to a lack of data on urban appearance. Can we use computers to quantify urban appearance from street-level imagery? We describe Streetscore: a computer vision algorithm that measures the perceived safety of streetscapes. Using Streetscore to evaluate 19 American cities, we find that the average perceived safety has a strong positive correlation with population density and household income; and the variation in perceived safety has a strong positive correlation with income inequality.
Date issued
2016-05Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media LaboratoryJournal
American Economic Review
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Naik, Nikhil, Ramesh Raskar and César A. Hidalgo. 2016. "Cities Are Physical Too: Using Computer Vision to Measure the Quality and Impact of Urban Appearance." American Economic Review, 106(5): 128-32.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0002-8282