How has human mobility changed under the COVID-19 Pandemic? GonzalezKelsey 2020 <div>This visualization, titled "How has human mobility changed under the COVID-19 Pandemic?" was submitted by Kelsey Gonzalez to the University of Arizona Libraries 2020 Data Visualization Challenge. It received the first place win within the graduate classification.</div><div><br></div>Submitted Abstract:<div>This visualization aims to understand population behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic. I use aggregated human mobility data (how far people move each day) from Cuebiq, an offline intelligence and measurement marketing company, which partners with 86 apps to collect first-party location data. Different U.S. states have handled the Covid-19 Pandemic in vastly different ways, with some states still refraining from issuing stay-at-home orders. This has led to very different mobility behaviors by state. I show that the stay-at-home order successfully reduced movement during the week of March 23rd and April 13th, with Americans reverting towards pre-COVID-19 movement patterns in between.</div><div><br></div><div><div><div><br><hr></div><div><br></div><div><i>For inquiries regarding the contents of this dataset, please contact the Corresponding Author listed in the README.txt file. Administrative inquiries (e.g., removal requests, trouble downloading, etc.) can be directed to data-management@arizona.edu</i></div><div><br></div><div><i>This item is part of <a href="https://doi.org/10.25422/azu.data.c.4986770">University of Arizona Libraries 2020 Data Visualization Challenge</a></i></div></div></div>