
handle: 11384/154425
The phenomenon of gentrification of an urban area is characterized by the displacement of lower-income residents due to rising living costs and an influx of wealthier individuals. This study presents an agent-based model that simulates urban gentrification through the relocation of three income groups — low, middle, and high — driven by living costs. The model incorporates economic and sociological theories to generate realistic neighborhood transition patterns. We introduce a temporal network-based measure to track the outflow of low-income residents and the inflow of middle- and high-income residents over time. Our experiments reveal that high-income residents trigger gentrification and that our network-based measure consistently detects gentrification patterns earlier than traditional count-based methods, potentially serving as an early detection tool in real-world scenarios. Moreover, the analysis highlights how city density promotes gentrification. This framework offers valuable insights for understanding gentrification dynamics and informing urban planning and policy decisions.
FOS: Physical sciences, Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph), Physics and Society, Gentrification, Multilayer networks, urban dynamics, Physics and Society
FOS: Physical sciences, Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph), Physics and Society, Gentrification, Multilayer networks, urban dynamics, Physics and Society
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