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Persistent Homology for Resource Coverage: A Case Study of Access to Polling Sites

Authors :
Hickok, Abigail
Jarman, Benjamin
Johnson, Michael
Luo, Jiajie
Porter, Mason A.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

It is important to choose the geographical distributions of public resources in a fair and equitable manner. However, it is complicated to quantify the equity of such a distribution; important factors include distances to resource sites, availability of transportation, and ease of travel. We use persistent homology, which is a tool from topological data analysis, to study the effective availability and coverage of polling sites. The information from persistent homology allows us to infer holes in the distribution of polling sites. We analyze and compare the coverage of polling sites in Los Angeles County and five cities (Atlanta, Chicago, Jacksonville, New York City, and Salt Lake City), and we conclude that computation of persistent homology appears to be a reasonable approach to analyzing resource coverage.<br />Comment: revised version

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2206.04834
Document Type :
Working Paper