Differencing the Risk of Reiterative Spatial Incidence of COVID-19 Using Space-Time 3D Bins of Geocoded Daily Cases
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2021Derechos
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
Publicado en
ISPRS international journal of geo-information, 10, 261.
Editorial
MPDI
Palabras clave
Emerging hotspots
Intelligence location
Spatial patterns
Microdata
Space–time trends
Geoprevention
Resumen/Abstract
ABSTRACT: The space-time behaviour of COVID-19 needs to be analysed frommicrodata to understand the spread of the virus. Hence, 3D space-time bins and analysis of associated emerging hotspots are useful methods for revealing the areas most at risk from the pandemic. To implement these methods, we have developed the SITAR Fast Action Territorial Information System using ESRI technologies. We first modelled emerging hotspots of COVID-19 geocoded cases for the region of Cantabria (Spain), then tested the predictive potential of the method with the accumulated cases for two months ahead. The results reveal the difference in risk associated with areas with COVID-19 cases. The study not only distinguishes whether a bin is statistically significant, but also identifies temporal trends: a reiterative pattern is detected in 58.31% of statistically significant bins (most with oscillating behaviour over the period). In the testing method phase, with positive cases for two months ahead, we found that only 7.37% of cases were located outside the initial 3D bins. Furthermore, 83.02% of new cases were in statistically significant previous emerging hotspots. To our knowledge, this is the first study to show the usefulness of the 3D bins and GIS emerging hotspots model of COVID-19 microdata in revealing strategic patterns of the pandemic for geoprevention plans.
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