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Intercity connectivity and urban innovation

Author(s)
Liang, Xiaofan; Hidalgo, César A; Balland, Pierre-Alexandre; Zheng, Siqi; Wang, Jianghao
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Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
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Abstract
Urban outputs, from economy to innovation, are known to grow as a power of a city's population. But, since large cities tend to be central in transportation and communication networks, the effects attributed to city size may be confounded with those of intercity connectivity. Here, we map intercity networks for the world's two largest economies (the United States and China) to explore whether a city's position in the networks of communication, human mobility, and scientific collaboration explains variance in a city's patenting activity that is unaccounted for by its population. We find evidence that models incorporating intercity connectivity outperform population-based models and exhibit stronger predictive power for patenting activity, particularly for technologies of more recent vintage (which we expect to be more complex or sophisticated). The effects of intercity connectivity are more robust in China, even after controlling for population, GDP, and education, but not in the United States once adjusted for GDP and education. This divergence suggests distinct urban network dynamics driving innovation in these regions. In China, models with social media and mobility networks explain more heterogeneity in the scaling of innovation, whereas in the United States, scientific collaboration plays a more significant role. These findings support the significance of a city's position within the intercity network in shaping its success in innovative activities.
Date issued
2024-04
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/156682
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Real Estate
Journal
Computers, Environment and Urban Systems
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Liang, Xiaofan, Hidalgo, César A, Balland, Pierre-Alexandre, Zheng, Siqi and Wang, Jianghao. 2024. "Intercity connectivity and urban innovation." Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, 109.
Version: Author's final manuscript

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