Publication | Open Access
Discovering and Characterizing Mobility Patterns in Urban Spaces
29
Citations
34
References
2016
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringActivity-travel PatternSocial SciencesComputational Social ScienceData ScienceData MiningMovement PatternsStatisticsMobility AnalysisMobility DataCharacterizing Mobility PatternsKnowledge DiscoveryUrban PlanningNon-negative Tensor FactorizationIndividual MobilityUrban GeographyUrban MobilityHuman MovementUrban Space
Nowadays, human movement in urban spaces can be traced digitally in many cases. It can be observed that movement patterns are not constant, but vary across time and space. In this work, we characterize such spatio-temporal patterns with an innovative combination of two separate approaches that have been utilized for studying human mobility in the past. First, by using non-negative tensor factorization (NTF), we are able to cluster human behavior based on spatio-temporal dimensions. Second, for characterizing these clusters, we propose to use HypTrails, a Bayesian approach for expressing and comparing hypotheses about human trails. To formalize hypotheses, we utilize publicly available Web data (i.e., Foursquare and census data). By studying taxi data in Manhattan, we can discover and characterize human mobility patterns that cannot be identified in a collective analysis. As one example, we find a group of taxi rides that end at locations with a high number of party venues on weekend nights. Our findings argue for a more fine-grained analysis of human mobility in order to make informed decisions for e.g., enhancing urban structures, tailored traffic control and location-based recommender systems.
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