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The contiguous United States in eleven zip codes: identifying and mapping socio-economic census data clusters and exemplars using affinity propagation

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  • Benjamin W. Heumann
  • Matthew E. Liesch
  • Nicholas R. Bogen
  • Ryan A. Meier
  • Marcello Graziano

Abstract

The United States is a diverse and heterogeneous place. Accurately organizing and mapping the U.S. into different regions based on characteristics such as wealth, race, education, language, and occupation is a complicated and arduous task. This paper demonstrates the application of affinity propagation to map socio-economic patterns and identify representative exemplars. Affinity propagation clusters data based on representative exemplars and considers all data points as potential cluster exemplars. We use socio-economic data from the United States census to cluster zip codes tabulation areas and identify representative locations of socio-economic diversity of the United States. The 11 socio-economic clusters were mapped individually and together using area-based generalization. Mapping the results illustrated distinct regionalization and historical migration trends within the United States as well as national urban/suburban/rural patterns. Future applications of this technique may be useful for data-driven socio-economic analysis and purposive sampling.

Suggested Citation

  • Benjamin W. Heumann & Matthew E. Liesch & Nicholas R. Bogen & Ryan A. Meier & Marcello Graziano, 2020. "The contiguous United States in eleven zip codes: identifying and mapping socio-economic census data clusters and exemplars using affinity propagation," Journal of Maps, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 16(1), pages 57-67, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:tjomxx:v:16:y:2020:i:1:p:57-67
    DOI: 10.1080/17445647.2020.1736193
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