Reach

Academic route and site traffic, mapped together.

The route runs from Delhi to Torino to Virginia. Blue pins mark the institutions already in the CV, and the traffic layer shows where readers are coming from as live aggregate traffic is recorded.

Institution locations are pulled from the existing CV entries. Traffic is stored as aggregate production visit data grouped by territory rather than individual visitor logs.

3institutions mapped
16traffic nodes
6countries represented

Map View

Study locations and readership on one map

Use the toggles to view institutions, traffic, or both. A curated city footprint is shown while live analytics continue to build in the background.

Projection: global equirectangular grid
Preview layer activeUpdated Apr 13, 2026
World map with institutions and traffic nodesNORTH AMERICASOUTH AMERICAEUROPEAFRICAASIAOCEANIAUniversity of DelhiDelhi, India1University of Delhi - Delhi, IndiaUniversity of TurinTorino, Italy2University of Turin - Torino, ItalyGeorge Mason UniversityVirginia, USA3George Mason University - Virginia, USADelhi, India - 10,728 sessionsMumbai, India - 9,827 sessionsBengaluru, India - 4,000 sessionsLondon, United Kingdom - 2,728 sessionsPune, India - 2,144 sessionsTorino, Italy - 1,539 sessionsHyderabad, India - 1,398 sessionsNoida, India - 1,216 sessionsKolkata, India - 1,187 sessionsGurugram, India - 943 sessionsPatna, India - 824 sessionsChandigarh, India - 781 sessionsFairfax, United States - 721 sessionsNew York, United States - 684 sessionsDubai, United Arab Emirates - 552 sessionsSingapore, Singapore - 418 sessions
Blue pins: attended institutionsOrange: traffic nodesDashed line: academic routeArcs: audience paths from current base

Traffic Ranking

Audience preview

39,690 preview sessions / 100,785 pageviews

Coverage Notes

What the map is showing

Blue pins mark the institutions in the academic record: University of Delhi, University of Turin, and George Mason University.

Orange circles show readership at an aggregated territory level, so the map stays focused on geographic reach rather than individual visits.