The Bath Experiment implied that one adult in 6 had a phone that could be logged -a Bluetooth phone set to "allow others to see my phone", a phone set to be discoverable. That would be interesting if true, as there were just under 30K phones sightings, which maps to 180K adult pedestrians. Regardless of that, the relative numbers provide insight of their own.
Here's the spread over the week.

Sunday, least popular. Tuesday to Friday most. Less on a Monday. Assuming that a big weekday group is the commuter and students, there could also be a big evening group, in which case less people are going out on a Monday. Or less students go to lectures on an Monday.
More interestingly: breakdown by hour of day

Big rush after 0900 - students again? And look at that evening rush, peak visitors between 1600 and 1700, with a gradual drop off.
Breaking down by half hour slots would show more, then there is flagging which phones have already been seen the same day; this would let you identify who was heading back.
For the paranoid, this experiment is no longer live. Disable bluetooth to avoid participating in similar experiments. And do not feel fear -not from this. Central goverment's plans to track every phone call and email is far more invasive. This project, "Georgian", is a community police state. It also means that Bristol Traffic is rapidly becoming the holder of more accurate data than anyone else. We know who you are and where you are going -stop it.





