1,943 research outputs found
Group-In: Group Inference from Wireless Traces of Mobile Devices
This paper proposes Group-In, a wireless scanning system to detect static or
mobile people groups in indoor or outdoor environments. Group-In collects only
wireless traces from the Bluetooth-enabled mobile devices for group inference.
The key problem addressed in this work is to detect not only static groups but
also moving groups with a multi-phased approach based only noisy wireless
Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSIs) observed by multiple wireless
scanners without localization support. We propose new centralized and
decentralized schemes to process the sparse and noisy wireless data, and
leverage graph-based clustering techniques for group detection from short-term
and long-term aspects. Group-In provides two outcomes: 1) group detection in
short time intervals such as two minutes and 2) long-term linkages such as a
month. To verify the performance, we conduct two experimental studies. One
consists of 27 controlled scenarios in the lab environments. The other is a
real-world scenario where we place Bluetooth scanners in an office environment,
and employees carry beacons for more than one month. Both the controlled and
real-world experiments result in high accuracy group detection in short time
intervals and sampling liberties in terms of the Jaccard index and pairwise
similarity coefficient.Comment: This work has been funded by the EU Horizon 2020 Programme under
Grant Agreements No. 731993 AUTOPILOT and No.871249 LOCUS projects. The
content of this paper does not reflect the official opinion of the EU.
Responsibility for the information and views expressed therein lies entirely
with the authors. Proc. of ACM/IEEE IPSN'20, 202
Socially Constrained Structural Learning for Groups Detection in Crowd
Modern crowd theories agree that collective behavior is the result of the
underlying interactions among small groups of individuals. In this work, we
propose a novel algorithm for detecting social groups in crowds by means of a
Correlation Clustering procedure on people trajectories. The affinity between
crowd members is learned through an online formulation of the Structural SVM
framework and a set of specifically designed features characterizing both their
physical and social identity, inspired by Proxemic theory, Granger causality,
DTW and Heat-maps. To adhere to sociological observations, we introduce a loss
function (G-MITRE) able to deal with the complexity of evaluating group
detection performances. We show our algorithm achieves state-of-the-art results
when relying on both ground truth trajectories and tracklets previously
extracted by available detector/tracker systems
Analysis of group evolution prediction in complex networks
In the world, in which acceptance and the identification with social
communities are highly desired, the ability to predict evolution of groups over
time appears to be a vital but very complex research problem. Therefore, we
propose a new, adaptable, generic and mutli-stage method for Group Evolution
Prediction (GEP) in complex networks, that facilitates reasoning about the
future states of the recently discovered groups. The precise GEP modularity
enabled us to carry out extensive and versatile empirical studies on many
real-world complex / social networks to analyze the impact of numerous setups
and parameters like time window type and size, group detection method,
evolution chain length, prediction models, etc. Additionally, many new
predictive features reflecting the group state at a given time have been
identified and tested. Some other research problems like enriching learning
evolution chains with external data have been analyzed as well
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