1,927 research outputs found

    Periodic pattern mining from spatio-temporal trajectory data

    Get PDF
    Rapid development in GPS tracking techniques produces a large number of spatio-temporal trajectory data. The analysis of these data provides us with a new opportunity to discover useful behavioural patterns. Spatio-temporal periodic pattern mining is employed to find temporal regularities for interesting places. Mining periodic patterns from spatio-temporal trajectories can reveal useful, important and valuable information about people's regular and recurrent movements and behaviours. Previous studies have been proposed to extract people's regular and repeating movement behavior from spatio-temporal trajectories. These previous approaches can target three following issues, (1) long individual trajectory; (2) spatial fuzziness; and (3) temporal fuzziness. First, periodic pattern mining is different to other pattern mining, such as association rule ming and sequential pattern mining, periodic pattern mining requires a very long trajectory from an individual so that the regular period can be extracted from this long single trajectory, for example, one month or one year period. Second, spatial fuzziness shows although a moving object can regularly move along the similar route, it is impossible for it to appear at the exactly same location. For instance, Bob goes to work everyday, and although he can follow a similar path from home to his workplace, the same location cannot be repeated across different days. Third, temporal fuzziness shows that periodicity is complicated including partial time span and multiple interleaving periods. In reality, the period is partial, it is highly impossible to occur through the whole movement of the object. Alternatively, the moving object has only a few periods, such as a daily period for work, or yearly period for holidays. However, it is insufficient to find effective periodic patterns considering these three issues only. This thesis aims to develop a new framework to extract more effective, understandable and meaningful periodic patterns by taking more features of spatio-temporal trajectories into account. The first feature is trajectory sequence, GPS trajectory data is temporally ordered sequences of geolocation which can be represented as consecutive trajectory segments, where each entry in each trajectory segment is closely related to the previous sampled point (trajectory node) and the latter one, rather than being isolated. Existing approaches disregard the important sequential nature of trajectory. Furthermore, they introduce both unwanted false positive reference spots and false negative reference spots. The second feature is spatial and temporal aspects. GPS trajectory data can be presented as triple data (x; y; t), x and y represent longitude and latitude respectively whilst t shows corresponding time in this location. Obviously, spatial and temporal aspects are two key factors. Existing methods do not consider these two aspects together in periodic pattern mining. Irregular time interval is the third feature of spatio-temporal trajectory. In reality, due to weather conditions, device malfunctions, or battery issues, the trajectory data are not always regularly sampled. Existing algorithms cannot deal with this issue but instead require a computationally expensive trajectory interpolation process, or it is assumed that trajectory is with regular time interval. The fourth feature is hierarchy of space. Hierarchy is an inherent property of spatial data that can be expressed in different levels, such as a country includes many states, a shopping mall is comprised of many shops. Hierarchy of space can find more hidden and valuable periodic patterns. Existing studies do not consider this inherent property of trajectory. Hidden background semantic information is the final feature. Aspatial semantic information is one of important features in spatio-temporal data, and it is embedded into the trajectory data. If the background semantic information is considered, more meaningful, understandable and useful periodic patterns can be extracted. However, existing methods do not consider the geographical information underlying trajectories. In addition, at times we are interested in finding periodic patterns among trajectory paths rather than trajectory nodes for different applications. This means periodic patterns should be identified and detected against trajectory paths rather than trajectory nodes for some applications. Existing approaches for periodic pattern mining focus on trajectories nodes rather than paths. To sum up, the aim of this thesis is to investigate solutions to these problems in periodic pattern mining in order to extract more meaningful, understandable periodic patterns. Each of three chapters addresses a different problem and then proposes adequate solutions to problems currently not addressed in existing studies. Finally, this thesis proposes a new framework to address all problems. First, we investigated a path-based solution which can target trajectory sequence and spatio-temporal aspects. We proposed an algorithm called Traclus (spatio-temporal) which can take spatial and temporal aspects into account at the same time instead of only considering spatial aspect. The result indicated our method produced more effective periodic patterns based on trajectory paths than existing node-based methods using two real-world trajectories. In order to consider hierarchy of space, we investigated existing hierarchical clustering approaches to obtain hierarchical reference spots (trajectory paths) for periodic pattern mining. HDBSCAN is an incremental version of DBSCAN which is able to handle clusters with different densities to generate a hierarchical clustering result using the single-linkage method, and then it automatically extracts clusters from a hierarchical tree. Thus, we modified traditional clustering method DBSCAN in Traclus (spatio-temporal) to HDBSCAN for extraction of hierarchical reference spots. The result is convincing, and reveals more periodic patterns than those of existing methods. Second, we introduced a stop/move method to annotate each spatio-temporal entry with a semantic label, such as restaurant, university and hospital. This method can enrich a trajectory with background semantic information so that we can easily infer people's repeating behaviors. In addition, existing methods use interpolation to make trajectory regular and then apply Fourier transform and autocorrelation to automatically detect period for each reference spot. An increasing number of trajectory nodes leads to an exponential increase of running time. Thus, we employed Lomb-Scargle periodogram to detect period for each reference spot based on raw trajectory without requiring any interpolation method. The results showed our method outperformed existing approaches on effectiveness and efficiency based on two real datasets. For hierarchical aspect, we extended previous work to find hierarchical semantic periodic patterns by applying HDBSCAN. The results were promising. Third, we apply our methodology to a case study, which reveals many interesting medical periodic patterns. These patterns can effectively explore human movement behaviors for positive medical outcomes. To sum up, this research proposed a new framework to gradually target the problems that existing methods cannot handle. These include: how to consider trajectory sequence, how to consider spatial temporal aspects together, how to deal with trajectory with irregular time interval, how to consider hierarchy of space and how to extract semantic information behind trajectory. After addressing all these problems, the experimental results demonstrate that our method can find more understandable, meaningful and effective periodic patterns than existing approaches

    Context Trees: Augmenting Geospatial Trajectories with Context

    Get PDF
    Exposing latent knowledge in geospatial trajectories has the potential to provide a better understanding of the movements of individuals and groups. Motivated by such a desire, this work presents the context tree, a new hierarchical data structure that summarises the context behind user actions in a single model. We propose a method for context tree construction that augments geospatial trajectories with land usage data to identify such contexts. Through evaluation of the construction method and analysis of the properties of generated context trees, we demonstrate the foundation for understanding and modelling behaviour afforded. Summarising user contexts into a single data structure gives easy access to information that would otherwise remain latent, providing the basis for better understanding and predicting the actions and behaviours of individuals and groups. Finally, we also present a method for pruning context trees, for use in applications where it is desirable to reduce the size of the tree while retaining useful information

    Trajectory data mining: A review of methods and applications

    Get PDF
    The increasing use of location-aware devices has led to an increasing availability of trajectory data. As a result, researchers devoted their efforts to developing analysis methods including different data mining methods for trajectories. However, the research in this direction has so far produced mostly isolated studies and we still lack an integrated view of problems in applications of trajectory mining that were solved, the methods used to solve them, and applications using the obtained solutions. In this paper, we first discuss generic methods of trajectory mining and the relationships between them. Then, we discuss and classify application problems that were solved using trajectory data and relate them to the generic mining methods that were used and real world applications based on them. We classify trajectory-mining application problems under major problem groups based on how they are related. This classification of problems can guide researchers in identifying new application problems. The relationships between the methods together with the association between the application problems and mining methods can help researchers in identifying gaps between methods and inspire them to develop new methods. This paper can also guide analysts in choosing a suitable method for a specific problem. The main contribution of this paper is to provide an integrated view relating applications of mining trajectory data and the methods used

    Latitude, longitude, and beyond:mining mobile objects' behavior

    Get PDF
    Rapid advancements in Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS), and wireless communications, have resulted in a surge in data generation. Mobility data is one of the various forms of data, which are ubiquitously collected by different location sensing devices. Extensive knowledge about the behavior of humans and wildlife is buried in raw mobility data. This knowledge can be used for realizing numerous viable applications ranging from wildlife movement analysis, to various location-based recommendation systems, urban planning, and disaster relief. With respect to what mentioned above, in this thesis, we mainly focus on providing data analytics for understanding the behavior and interaction of mobile entities (humans and animals). To this end, the main research question to be addressed is: How can behaviors and interactions of mobile entities be determined from mobility data acquired by (mobile) wireless sensor nodes in an accurate and efficient manner? To answer the above-mentioned question, both application requirements and technological constraints are considered in this thesis. On the one hand, applications requirements call for accurate data analytics to uncover hidden information about individual behavior and social interaction of mobile entities, and to deal with the uncertainties in mobility data. Technological constraints, on the other hand, require these data analytics to be efficient in terms of their energy consumption and to have low memory footprint, and processing complexity

    New directions in the analysis of movement patterns in space and time

    Get PDF

    Knowledge discovery from trajectories

    Get PDF
    Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial TechnologiesAs a newly proliferating study area, knowledge discovery from trajectories has attracted more and more researchers from different background. However, there is, until now, no theoretical framework for researchers gaining a systematic view of the researches going on. The complexity of spatial and temporal information along with their combination is producing numerous spatio-temporal patterns. In addition, it is very probable that a pattern may have different definition and mining methodology for researchers from different background, such as Geographic Information Science, Data Mining, Database, and Computational Geometry. How to systematically define these patterns, so that the whole community can make better use of previous research? This paper is trying to tackle with this challenge by three steps. First, the input trajectory data is classified; second, taxonomy of spatio-temporal patterns is developed from data mining point of view; lastly, the spatio-temporal patterns appeared on the previous publications are discussed and put into the theoretical framework. In this way, researchers can easily find needed methodology to mining specific pattern in this framework; also the algorithms needing to be developed can be identified for further research. Under the guidance of this framework, an application to a real data set from Starkey Project is performed. Two questions are answers by applying data mining algorithms. First is where the elks would like to stay in the whole range, and the second is whether there are corridors among these regions of interest

    Mining Individual Behavior Pattern Based on Semantic Knowledge Discovery of Trajectory

    Get PDF
    This paper attempts to mine the hidden individual behavior pattern from the raw users’ trajectory data. Based on DBSCAN, a novel spatio-temporal data clustering algorithm named Speed-based Clustering Algorithm was put forward to find slow-speed subtrajectories (i.e., stops) of the single trajectory that the user stopped for a longer time. The algorithm used maximal speed and minimal stopping time to compute the stops and introduced the quantile function to estimate the value of the parameter, which showed more effectively and accurately than DBSCAN and certain improved DBSCAN algorithms in the experimental results. In addition, after the stops are connected with POIs that have the characteristic of an information presentation, the paper designed a POI-Behavior Mapping Table to analyze the user’s activities according to the stopping time and visiting frequency, on the basis of which the user’s daily regular behavior pattern can be mined from the history trajectories. In the end, LBS operators are able to provide intelligent and personalized services so as to achieve precise marketing in terms of the characteristics of the individual behavior.</p
    • …
    corecore