Truncated lognormal distributions and scaling in the size of naturally defined population clusters

Publication date

2020-01-01



Abstract

Using population data of high spatial resolution for a region in the south of Europe, we define cities by aggregating individuals to form connected clusters. The resulting cluster-population distributions show a smooth decreasing behavior covering six orders of magnitude. We perform a detailed study of the distributions, using state-of-the-art statistical tools. By means of scaling analysis we rule out the existence of a power-law regime in the low-population range. The logarithmic-coefficient-of-variation test allows us to establish that the power-law tail for high population, characteristic of Zipfs law, has a rather limited range of applicability. Instead, lognormal fits describe the population distributions in a range covering from a few dozen individuals to more than 1×106 (which corresponds to the population of the largest cluster). © 2020 American Physical Society.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Pages

13 p.

Publisher

American Physical Society

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CRM Articles [719]