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Back in November, I collected some data during a flight delay at a Chicago-area airport and found that the majority of travelers (85% to 90%) were adhering to the federal transportation mask mandate in place at the time. When the mandate ended in April following a court decision, many rejoiced in their new maskless freedom.
As a data scientist, I am always looking for data sets to collect and analyze in the hope of revealing some properties of a system or glean some insights.
During a recent rain delay at the same airport, I was surprised to see a sizable number of travelers wearing face masks. This presented a great opportunity to see how masking behavior has changed now that no one is being forced to mask up.
Here is what I observed:
The ratio of male to female travelers was around 60% to 40%. This is fairly consistent with data on air travel frequency by gender for 2015, as reported by Statista.
My primary interest was assessing the rate at which travelers were wearing face masks, which turned out to be 25%.