New Apple tool visualizes how COVID-19 is changing travel habits

Posted:
in iOS edited April 2020
Apple has begun publishing interactive Mobility Trends Reports derived from anonymized Apple Maps data requests in an effort to demonstrate how people worldwide are changing their travel habits and staying indoors during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.




Revealed on Tuesday, the page within Apple's COVID-19 site offers users with line graphs showing requests for directions in Apple Maps. Rather than showing actual request figures, the chart instead indicates changes in the number of requests made over time, allowing for percentage-based comparisons between populations.

The default view for the chart offers results for the United States, UK, Germany, and Italy, with a search box allowing users to narrow down data by country, region, or city. Drilling down to a specific area also refines the chart so instead of showing a general change in results, it narrows down results into Driving, Walking, and Transit categories.




Along with the graph, the page also offers the complete data set as a download, complete with daily changes in requests by transportation type, covering all available countries, regions, and cities.

The chart's ultimate aim is to "provide helpful insights to local governments and health authorities" impacted by the coronavirus pandemic, "and may also be used as a foundation for new public policies by showing the change in volume of people driving, walking, or taking public transit in their communities."

Apple is keen to stress how it is ensuring user privacy for the chart, which includes aggregating data before putting it into the chart so it reflects a region's activity, not an individual. "Data collected by Maps, like search terms, navigation routing, and traffic information, is associated with random, rotating identifiers that continually reset, so Apple doesn't have a profile of your movements and searches," the company states.

While protecting your privacy, we are sharing aggregated mobility data from Apple Maps to help public health authorities learn how people travel in their communities and to provide valuable insights to stop the spread of COVID-19. Stay safe and healthy! https://t.co/Nok77HKIXN

-- Tim Cook (@tim_cook)
The results are separate from the joint effort between Apple and Google to perform contact tracking with apps, developing APIs that use Bluetooth to identify if people have been in close proximity to those who may be carrying the virus, while still ensuring user privacy.

Apple has simplified the process for healthcare providers to add listings to Apple Maps to show where COVID-19 testing sites are located. Default searches within Apple Maps have also been updated, pointing users to services they are more likely to request during the period of social distancing and stay-at-home orders.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    red oakred oak Posts: 1,089member
    I tried it.  The search functionality and UI needs work. Try typing in “Rome, Italy”

    edited April 2020
  • Reply 2 of 5
    slurpyslurpy Posts: 5,384member
    red oak said:
    I tried it.  The search functionality and UI needs work. Try typing in “Rome, Italy”

    Typed Rome, worked perfectly.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 5
    More specifically, how people’s response to covid-19 is changing their travel habits. If people simply had good awareness of what they’re touching and would keep a reasonable distance from others then there’d be no need at all to limit travel or close as many businesses as we have.

    People are quick to place the blame—on China, on Trump, etc—but the blame of the spread of the virus ever since it became known what it’s doing lies entirely on the population.

    Limiting travel is a solution for a population who has little self control and little sense of personal responsibility. We’re basically a bunch of infants who want the government to take care of us.
  • Reply 4 of 5
    tyler82tyler82 Posts: 1,102member
    georgie01 said:
    More specifically, how people’s response to covid-19 is changing their travel habits. If people simply had good awareness of what they’re touching and would keep a reasonable distance from others then there’d be no need at all to limit travel or close as many businesses as we have.

    People are quick to place the blame—on China, on Trump, etc—but the blame of the spread of the virus ever since it became known what it’s doing lies entirely on the population.

    Limiting travel is a solution for a population who has little self control and little sense of personal responsibility. We’re basically a bunch of infants who want the government to take care of us.
    Give it a rest.
    roundaboutnowwatto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 5
    It seems an historic decline (as per graph lines). Hope to see them going up again as the summer progresses.
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