3,915 research outputs found

    PPQ-Trajectory : spatio-temporal quantization for querying in large trajectory repositories

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    We present PPQ-trajectory, a spatio-temporal quantization based solution for querying large dynamic trajectory data. PPQ-trajectory includes a partition-wise predictive quantizer (PPQ) that generates an error-bounded codebook with autocorrelation and spatial proximity-based partitions. The codebook is indexed to run approximate and exact spatio-temporal queries over compressed trajectories. PPQ-trajectory includes a coordinate quadtree coding for the codebook with support for exact queries. An incremental temporal partition-based index is utilised to avoid full reconstruction of trajectories during queries. An extensive set of experimental results for spatio-temporal queries on real trajectory datasets is presented. PPQ-trajectory shows significant improvements over the alternatives with respect to several performance measures, including the accuracy of results when the summary is used directly to provide approximate query results, the spatial deviation with which spatio-temporal path queries can be answered when the summary is used as an index, and the time taken to construct the summary. Superior results on the quality of the summary and the compression ratio are also demonstrated

    Clustering Customer Shopping Trips With Network Structure

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    Moving objects can be tracked with sensors such as RFID tags or GPS devices. Their movement can be represented as sequences of time-stamped locations. Studying such spatio-temporal movement sequences to discover spatial sequential patterns holds promises in many real-world settings. A few interesting applications are customer shopping traverse pattern discovery, vehicle traveling pattern discovery, and route prediction. Traditional spatial data mining algorithms suitable for the Euclidean space are not directly applicable in these settings. We propose a new algorithm to cluster movement paths such as shopping trips for pattern discovery. In our work, we represent the spatio-temporal series as sequences of discrete locations following a pre-defined network. We incorporate a modified version of the Longest Common Subsequence (LCS) algorithm with the network structure to measure the similarity of movement paths. With such spatial networks we implicitly address the existence of spatial obstructs as well. Experiments were performed on both hand-collected real-life trips and simulated trips in grocery shopping. The initial evaluation results show that our proposed approach, called Net-LCSS, can be used to support effective and efficient clustering for shopping trip pattern discovery
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