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Related Concept Videos

Migration00:53

Migration

Migration is long-range, seasonal movement from one region or habitat to another. This common strategy, carried out by many different organisms around the world, is an adaptive response that typically corresponds to changes in an organism’s environment, like resource availability or climate. Migrations can involve huge groups of thousands of animals as well as single individuals traveling alone and can range from thousands of kilometers to just a few hundred meters.
Life Histories01:29

Life Histories

Constrained by limited energy and resources, organisms must compromise between offspring quantity and parental investment. This trade-off is represented by two primary reproductive strategies; K-strategists produce few offspring but provide substantial parental support, whereas r-strategists produce much progeny that receives little care. These strategies are related to an organism’s survival likelihood across its lifespan, which is represented by a survivorship curve. Three general types of...
Energy Budgets and Reproductive Strategies00:51

Energy Budgets and Reproductive Strategies

Organisms must balance energy intake with the energy required for growth, maintenance, and reproduction. These trade-offs result in a variety of survivorship and reproductive strategies, including semelparity and iteroparity. Semelparous species reproduce only once in their lifetime, often investing most available resources into that single reproductive event. Iteroparous species, by contrast, reproduce multiple times over their lifetimes, typically allocating fewer resources to any single...
Cognitive Dissonance01:38

Cognitive Dissonance

Social psychologists have documented that feeling good about ourselves and maintaining positive self-esteem is a powerful motivator of human behavior (Tavris & Aronson, 2008). In the United States, members of the predominant culture typically think very highly of themselves and view themselves as good people who are above average on many desirable traits (Ehrlinger, Gilovich, & Ross, 2005). Often, our behavior, attitudes, and beliefs are affected when we experience a threat to our...
Habitat Fragmentation02:31

Habitat Fragmentation

Habitat fragmentation describes the division of a more extensive, continuous habitat into smaller, discontinuous areas. Human activities such as land conversion, as well as slower geological processes leading to changes in the physical environment, are the two leading causes of habitat fragmentation. The fragmentation process typically follows the same steps: perforation, dissection, fragmentation, shrinkage, and attrition.
Mechanistic Models: Compartment Models in Individual and Population Analysis01:23

Mechanistic Models: Compartment Models in Individual and Population Analysis

Mechanistic models are utilized in individual analysis using single-source data, but imperfections arise due to data collection errors, preventing perfect prediction of observed data. The mathematical equation involves known values (Xi), observed concentrations (Ci), measurement errors (εi), model parameters (ϕj), and the related function (ƒi) for i number of values. Different least-squares metrics quantify differences between predicted and observed values. The ordinary least squares (OLS)...

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A model of temporary migration: the Egyptian case.

International migration (Geneva, Switzerland)·1996
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The emergence of migration theory and a suggested new direction.

Journal of economic surveys·1989
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Families, migration and adjusting to disequilibrium.

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 13, 2026

Competitive Homing Assays to Study Gut-tropic T Cell Migration
10:25

Competitive Homing Assays to Study Gut-tropic T Cell Migration

Published on: March 1, 2011

Time, hedonic migration, and household production.

M P Shields

    Journal of Regional Science
    |February 1, 1995
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Economic growth drives migration to regions with lower household production time costs. This increased demand raises housing prices in these attractive, time-saving areas.

    Keywords:
    AmericasDemographic FactorsDeveloped CountriesEconomic FactorsFamily And HouseholdGeographic FactorsHouseholdsHousing--costMacroeconomic FactorsMigrationModels, TheoreticalNorth AmericaNorthern AmericaPopulationPopulation DynamicsProductionResearch MethodologyResidence CharacteristicsSpatial DistributionTime FactorsUnited States

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    Area of Science:

    • Environmental and Regional Economics
    • Household Economics
    • Urban Economics

    Background:

    • Regional amenities influence household production decisions.
    • New demand theory provides a framework for understanding these influences.
    • Household production incorporates goods, time, and housing as inputs.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To develop a hedonic migration model incorporating regional amenities.
    • To analyze the impact of economic growth on regional attractiveness and migration patterns.
    • To investigate the relationship between time-saving regions, migration, and housing costs.

    Main Methods:

    • Development of a hedonic migration model.
    • Application of new demand theory to household production.
    • Analysis of economic growth's effect on regional amenity valuation and migration flows.

    Main Results:

    • Economic growth enhances the attractiveness of time-saving regions.
    • Regions with lower time elasticity of household production experience increased in-migration.
    • Rising demand in time-saving regions leads to increased housing costs.

    Conclusions:

    • Hedonic migration models can explain regional economic dynamics.
    • Time-saving amenities are crucial factors in migration decisions during economic expansion.
    • Economic growth and regional characteristics interact to shape housing market trends.