2 research outputs found

    Inferring the social-connectedness of locations from mobility data

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    An often discriminating feature of a location is its social character or how well its visitors know each other. In this paper, we address the question of how we can infer the social contentedness of a location by observing the presence of mobile entities in it. We study a large number of mobility features that can be extracted from visits to a location. We use these features for predicting the social tie strengths of the device owners present in the location at a given moment in time, and output an aggregate score of social connectedness for that location. We evaluate this method by testing it on a real-world dataset. Using a synthetically modified version of this dataset, we further evaluate its robustness against factors that normally degrade the quality of such ubiquitously collected data (e.g. noise, sampling frequency). In each case, we found that the accuracy of the proposed method highly outperforms that of a state-of-the-art baseline methodology
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