15 de abril de 2014

The Origins of Scaling in Cities



Luís M. A. Bettencourt

Science 21 June 2013
Vol. 340 no. 6139 pp. 1438-1441


Abstract

Despite the increasing importance of cities in human societies, our ability to understand them scientifically and manage them in practice has remained limited. The greatest difficulties to any scientific approach to cities have resulted from their many interdependent facets, as social, economic, infrastructural, and spatial complex systems that exist in similar but changing forms over a huge range of scales. Here, I show how all cities may evolve according to a small set of basic principles that operate locally. A theoretical framework was developed to predict the average social, spatial, and infrastructural properties of cities as a set of scaling relations that apply to all urban systems. Confirmation of these predictions was observed for thousands of cities worldwide, from many urban systems at different levels of development. Measures of urban efficiency, capturing the balance between socioeconomic outputs and infrastructural costs, were shown to be independent of city size and might be a useful means to evaluate urban planning strategies.

In:
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/340/6139/1438.abstract?sid=c1ee5db8-f75d-4db3-9f98-95b282737226

Ler artigo completo:
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.393.8147&rep=rep1&type=pdf

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