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Topological Graph Simplification Solutions to the Street Intersection Miscount Problem

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  • Boeing, Geoff

    (Northeastern University)

Abstract

Street intersection counts and densities are ubiquitous measures in transport geography and planning. However, typical street network data and typical street network analysis tools can substantially overcount them. This article explains the three main reasons why this happens and presents solutions to each. It contributes algorithms to automatically simplify spatial graphs of urban street networks---via edge simplification and node consolidation---resulting in faster parsimonious models and more accurate network measures like intersection counts and densities, street segment lengths, and node degrees. These algorithms' information compression improves downstream graph analytics' memory and runtime efficiency, boosting analytical tractability without loss of model fidelity. Finally, this article validates these algorithms and empirically assesses intersection count biases worldwide to demonstrate the problem's widespread prevalence. Without consolidation, traditional methods would overestimate the median urban area intersection count by 14%. However, this bias varies drastically across regions, underscoring these algorithms' importance for consistent comparative empirical analyses.

Suggested Citation

  • Boeing, Geoff, 2025. "Topological Graph Simplification Solutions to the Street Intersection Miscount Problem," SocArXiv xf7wm_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:xf7wm_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/xf7wm_v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Stephen Marshall & Jorge Gil & Karl Kropf & Martin Tomko & Lucas Figueiredo, 2018. "Street Network Studies: from Networks to Models and their Representations," Networks and Spatial Economics, Springer, vol. 18(3), pages 735-749, September.
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    Cited by:

    1. Boeing, Geoff, 2025. "Modeling and Analyzing Urban Networks and Amenities with OSMnx," SocArXiv d5fp3_v1, Center for Open Science.

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