Fig 1.
The study area consisting of four villages in Tha Song Yang district, Tak province of Thailand.
The number of participants and total population of each village are shown next to the village name as (participants/population). The map in this figure was produced using ArcGIS version 10.4 (Esri, Redlands, CA, USA). Source of shapefile: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs https://data.humdata.org/dataset/thailand-administrative-boundaries. The inset maps in the figure were created using an open-source map from https://landsatlook.usgs.gov/.
Fig 2.
Overall RoG (a), stratified by Sex (b), and stratified by Age (c).
Fig 3.
Median RoG values over the five intervals for each category of occupation (meters).
No data is available in Interval 5 for public health personnel and other.
Fig 4.
Daily RoG values during normal and curfew times in each interval (meters).
Fig 5.
Human mobility network visualization for Intervals 1–5.
Each node represents an activity cluster. Each edge denotes human movement in the direction of the arrow. The thickness of the edges is proportional to the number of trips between the nodes. Cluster C1 corresponds to a small town in Myanmar; C2 corresponds to village A, C3 corresponds to village B; C4 covers villages C and D; and C5 corresponds to the district capital. The maps in this figure were created using an open-source map from https://landsatlook.usgs.gov/.
Fig 6.
Number of trips outside the home village per participant per day in each interval, broken down into long and short trips.
Short trips are defined as those for which the maximum distance from the village boundary is less than 500 meters and long trips are those greater than 500 meters.
Fig 7.
Number of cross-border trips per participant per day in each interval, broken down into long and short trips.
Short trips are defined as those for which the maximum distance from the border is less than 500 meters and long trips are those greater than 500 meters.