Mining interesting locations and travel sequences from GPS trajectories
Yu Zheng,Lizhu Zhang,Xing Xie,Wei-Ying Ma +3 more
- 20 Apr 2009
- pp 791-800
TL;DR: This work first model multiple individuals' location histories with a tree-based hierarchical graph (TBHG), and proposes a HITS (Hypertext Induced Topic Search)-based inference model, which regards an individual's access on a location as a directed link from the user to that location.
read more
Abstract: The increasing availability of GPS-enabled devices is changing the way people interact with the Web, and brings us a large amount of GPS trajectories representing people's location histories. In this paper, based on multiple users' GPS trajectories, we aim to mine interesting locations and classical travel sequences in a given geospatial region. Here, interesting locations mean the culturally important places, such as Tiananmen Square in Beijing, and frequented public areas, like shopping malls and restaurants, etc. Such information can help users understand surrounding locations, and would enable travel recommendation. In this work, we first model multiple individuals' location histories with a tree-based hierarchical graph (TBHG). Second, based on the TBHG, we propose a HITS (Hypertext Induced Topic Search)-based inference model, which regards an individual's access on a location as a directed link from the user to that location. This model infers the interest of a location by taking into account the following three factors. 1) The interest of a location depends on not only the number of users visiting this location but also these users' travel experiences. 2) Users' travel experiences and location interests have a mutual reinforcement relationship. 3) The interest of a location and the travel experience of a user are relative values and are region-related. Third, we mine the classical travel sequences among locations considering the interests of these locations and users' travel experiences. We evaluated our system using a large GPS dataset collected by 107 users over a period of one year in the real world. As a result, our HITS-based inference model outperformed baseline approaches like rank-by-count and rank-by-frequency. Meanwhile, when considering the users' travel experiences and location interests, we achieved a better performance beyond baselines, such as rank-by-count and rank-by-interest, etc.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
A Neural Network Approach to Jointly Modeling Social Networks and Mobile Trajectories
TL;DR: In this paper, a novel neural network model that can jointly model both social networks and mobile trajectories is presented, where the two components are tied by sharing the user network representations.
168
Explaining the power-law distribution of human mobility through transportation modality decomposition
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose to decompose the Levy walk behavior observed in human mobility patterns by decomposing them into different classes according to the different transportation modes, such as Walk/Run, Bike, Train/Subway or Car/Taxi/Bus.
Automated tracking to measure behavioural changes in pigs for health and welfare monitoring.
TL;DR: Validation of the automated monitoring system with the controlled challenge study provides a reproducible framework for further development of robust early warning systems for pigs, and has the potential to transform how livestock are monitored, directly impact their health and welfare, and address issues in livestock farming.
Personalized travel recommendation by mining people attributes from community-contributed photos
An-Jung Cheng,Yan-Ying Chen,Yen-Ta Huang,Winston H. Hsu,Hong-Yuan Mark Liao +4 more
- 28 Nov 2011
TL;DR: This work proposes to conduct personalized travel recommendation by leveraging the freely available community-contributed photos to leverage the automatically detected people attributes in the photo contents to improve prior travel recommendation methods especially in difficult predictions by further leveraging user contexts in mobile devices.
155
The Long Road to Computational Location Privacy: A Survey
TL;DR: The protection mechanisms between online and offline use cases are divided into six categories depending on the nature of their algorithm, and the evaluation metrics used to assess protection mechanisms in terms of privacy, utility and performance are surveyed.
154
References
Reality mining: sensing complex social systems
Nathan Eagle,Alex Pentland +1 more
- 27 Mar 2006
TL;DR: The ability to use standard Bluetooth-enabled mobile telephones to measure information access and use in different contexts, recognize social patterns in daily user activity, infer relationships, identify socially significant locations, and model organizational rhythms is demonstrated.
Using GPS to learn significant locations and predict movement across multiple users
Daniel Ashbrook,Thad Starner +1 more
- 01 Oct 2003
TL;DR: This work presents a system that automatically clusters GPS data taken over an extended period of time into meaningful locations at multiple scales and incorporates these locations into a Markov model that can be consulted for use with a variety of applications in both single-user and collaborative scenarios.
1.3K
Understanding mobility based on GPS data
Yu Zheng,Quannan Li,Yukun Chen,Xing Xie,Wei-Ying Ma +4 more
- 21 Sep 2008
TL;DR: An approach based on supervised learning to infer people's motion modes from their GPS logs is proposed, which identifies a set of sophisticated features, which are more robust to traffic condition than those other researchers ever used.
Trajectory pattern mining
Fosca Giannotti,Mirco Nanni,Fabio Pinelli,Dino Pedreschi +3 more
- 12 Aug 2007
TL;DR: This paper develops an extension of the sequential pattern mining paradigm that analyzes the trajectories of moving objects and introduces trajectory patterns as concise descriptions of frequent behaviours in terms of both space and time.
Mining user similarity based on location history
Quannan Li,Yu Zheng,Xing Xie,Yukun Chen,Wenyu Liu,Wei-Ying Ma +5 more
- 05 Nov 2008
TL;DR: A framework, referred to as hierarchical-graph-based similarity measurement (HGSM), is proposed for geographic information systems to consistently model each individual's location history and effectively measure the similarity among users and outperforms related similarity measures, such as the cosine similarity and Pearson similarity measures.