Regression Toward the Mean in Neighborhood Effects Research: A Geographic Perspective

Abstract

Neighborhood effects research focuses on the residential neighborhood, assuming it as the main spatial context relevant to individual outcomes. Individuals, however, are mobile and visit various spatial contexts other than the residential neighborhoods. This article conceptualizes contextual exposures to socioenvironmental factors in daily activity spaces and their relationship with residential exposures. By introducing regression toward the mean, we argue that mobility-based contextual exposures are, on average, less extreme than residential exposures. Previous neighborhood effects studies therefore tend to underestimate actual spatial contextual effects when they misrepresent residential neighborhood effects as the total contextual effects. Despite improved measurement accuracy with the transition from residence- to mobility-based exposures, we suggest the complexities remaining in the estimation of spatial contextual effects from a geographic perspective. These complexities include a possibly limited extent of neighborhood effects regression across neighborhoods and asymmetrical dispersion of between-individual contextual exposures within each neighborhood.

Publication
Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 115(7), 1596–1612
Ana Petrović
Ana Petrović
Assistant Professor

I’m an Urban Geographer studying how spatial inequalities and neighbourhood contexts shape life outcomes, using large and complex data and inclusive mapping to enhance social policy, urban design and accessibility.

Maarten van Ham
Maarten van Ham
Full Professor

My research focuses on patterns of urban inequalities and their effects for people. I have a particular interest in segregation, residential mobility, and how spatial inequalities influence individual outcomes in cities.