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Using daily nighttime lights to monitor spatiotemporal patterns of human lifestyle under covid-19: The case of saudi arabia

Using daily nighttime lights to monitor spatiotemporal patterns of human lifestyle under covid-19: The case of saudi arabia
Using daily nighttime lights to monitor spatiotemporal patterns of human lifestyle under covid-19: The case of saudi arabia
A novel coronavirus, COVID-19, appeared at the beginning of 2020 and within a few months spread worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic had some of its greatest impacts on social, economic and religious activities. This study focused on the application of daily nighttime light (NTL) data (VNP46A2) to measure the spatiotemporal impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the human lifestyle in Saudi Arabia at the national, province and governorate levels as well as on selected cities and sites. The results show that NTL brightness was reduced in all the pandemic periods in 2020 compared with a pre-pandemic period in 2019, and this was consistent with the socioeconomic results. An early pandemic period showed the greatest effects on the human lifestyle due to the closure of mosques and the implementation of a curfew. A slight improvement in the NTL intensity was observed in later pandemic periods, which represented Ramadan and Eid Alfiter days when Muslims usually increase the light of their houses. Closures of the two holy mosques in Makkah and Madinah affected the human lifestyle in these holy cities as well as that of Umrah pilgrims inside Saudi Arabia and abroad. The findings of this study confirm that the social and cultural context of each country must be taken into account when interpreting COVID-19 impacts, and that analysis of difference in nighttime lights is sensitive to these factors. In Saudi Arabia, the origin of Islam and one of the main sources of global energy, the preventive measures taken not only affected Saudi society; impacts spread further and reached the entire Islamic society and other societies, too.
COVID-19 pandemic, Holy Mosque, Human lifestyle, NTL, Prophet’s Mosque, Saudi Arabia, VIIRS DNB
2072-4292
Alahmadi, Mohammed
52e13a8d-d2c2-481a-b9b3-c003901233a4
Mansour, Shawky
ac8a0201-1b20-43bc-b7fc-3b3c712eb3fd
Dasgupta, Nataraj
0e046248-535f-49ca-a366-c8056029fa81
Abulibdeh, Ammar
a8d248d5-2539-4f10-8dc9-85d131f8598a
Atkinson, Peter
96e96579-56fe-424d-a21c-17b6eed13b0b
Martin, David
e5c52473-e9f0-4f09-b64c-fa32194b162f
Alahmadi, Mohammed
52e13a8d-d2c2-481a-b9b3-c003901233a4
Mansour, Shawky
ac8a0201-1b20-43bc-b7fc-3b3c712eb3fd
Dasgupta, Nataraj
0e046248-535f-49ca-a366-c8056029fa81
Abulibdeh, Ammar
a8d248d5-2539-4f10-8dc9-85d131f8598a
Atkinson, Peter
96e96579-56fe-424d-a21c-17b6eed13b0b
Martin, David
e5c52473-e9f0-4f09-b64c-fa32194b162f

Alahmadi, Mohammed, Mansour, Shawky, Dasgupta, Nataraj, Abulibdeh, Ammar, Atkinson, Peter and Martin, David (2021) Using daily nighttime lights to monitor spatiotemporal patterns of human lifestyle under covid-19: The case of saudi arabia. Remote Sensing, 13 (22), [4633]. (doi:10.3390/rs13224633).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A novel coronavirus, COVID-19, appeared at the beginning of 2020 and within a few months spread worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic had some of its greatest impacts on social, economic and religious activities. This study focused on the application of daily nighttime light (NTL) data (VNP46A2) to measure the spatiotemporal impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the human lifestyle in Saudi Arabia at the national, province and governorate levels as well as on selected cities and sites. The results show that NTL brightness was reduced in all the pandemic periods in 2020 compared with a pre-pandemic period in 2019, and this was consistent with the socioeconomic results. An early pandemic period showed the greatest effects on the human lifestyle due to the closure of mosques and the implementation of a curfew. A slight improvement in the NTL intensity was observed in later pandemic periods, which represented Ramadan and Eid Alfiter days when Muslims usually increase the light of their houses. Closures of the two holy mosques in Makkah and Madinah affected the human lifestyle in these holy cities as well as that of Umrah pilgrims inside Saudi Arabia and abroad. The findings of this study confirm that the social and cultural context of each country must be taken into account when interpreting COVID-19 impacts, and that analysis of difference in nighttime lights is sensitive to these factors. In Saudi Arabia, the origin of Islam and one of the main sources of global energy, the preventive measures taken not only affected Saudi society; impacts spread further and reached the entire Islamic society and other societies, too.

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remotesensing-13-04633-v2 - Version of Record
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Published date: 17 November 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: Acknowledgments: The authors acknowledge support from the King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST). The authors thank Tareq Alahmadi for his help regarding Islamic culture. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Copyright: Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic, Holy Mosque, Human lifestyle, NTL, Prophet’s Mosque, Saudi Arabia, VIIRS DNB

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452431
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452431
ISSN: 2072-4292
PURE UUID: 19533e28-5009-4c9b-a637-81043a191ba3
ORCID for Peter Atkinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5489-6880
ORCID for David Martin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0397-0769

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 09 Dec 2021 18:24
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:34

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Contributors

Author: Mohammed Alahmadi
Author: Shawky Mansour
Author: Nataraj Dasgupta
Author: Ammar Abulibdeh
Author: Peter Atkinson ORCID iD
Author: David Martin ORCID iD

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