1,375 research outputs found

    Identification, Representation, and Analysis of Convective Storms

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    Large amount of time series of spatial snapshot data have been collected or generated for the monitoring and modeling of environmental systems. Those data provide an opportunity to study the movement and dynamics of natural phenomena. While the snapshot organization is conceptually simple and straightforward, it does not directly capture or represent the dynamic characteristics of the phenomena. This study presents computational methods to identify dynamic events from time series of spatial snapshots. Events are represented as directed spatiotemporal graphs to characterize their initiation, development, movement, and cessation. Graph-based algorithms are then used to analyze the dynamics of the events. The method is demonstrated using the time series radar reflectivity images during one of the deadliest storm outbreaks that impacted 15 states of southeastern U.S. between April 23 and 29, 2011. As shown in this case study, convective storm events identified using our methods are consistent with previous studies and our analysis indicates that the left split/merger occurs more than right split/merger in those convective storm events, which confirms theory, numerical simulations, and other observed case studies. This study also examines the spatial and temporal characteristics of thunderstorm life cycles in central United States mainly covering Kansas, Oklahoma, and northern Texas during the warm seasons from 2010 to 2014. Radar reflectivity and cloud-to-ground lightning data were used to identify thunderstorms. The thunderstorms were stored in a GIS database with a number of additional thunderstorm attributes. The spatial and temporal characteristics of thunderstorm occurrence, duration, initiation time, termination time, movement speed, and direction were analyzed. Results revealed that thunderstorms were most frequent in the eastern part of the study area, especially at the borders among Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. We also linked thunderstorm features to land cover types and compared thunderstorm characteristics between urban and surrounding rural areas. Our results indicated that thunderstorms favor forests and urban areas. This research demonstrates that advanced GIS representations and analyses for spatiotemporal events provide insights in thunderstorm climatology study

    Assessing similarity of dynamic geographic phenomena in spatiotemporal databases.

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    The growing availability of routine observations from satellite imagery and other remote sensors holds great promise for improved understanding of processes that act in the landscape. However, geographers' ability to effectively use such spatiotemporal data is challenged by large data volume and limitations of conventional data models in geographic information systems (GIS), which provide limited support for querying and exploration of spatiotemporal data other than simple comparisons of temporally referenced snapshots. Current GIS representations allow measurement of change but do not address coherent patterns of change that reflects the working of geographic events and processes. This dissertation presents a representational and query framework to overcome the limitations and enable assessing similarity of dynamic phenomena. The research includes three self contained but related studies: (1) development of a representational framework that incorporates spatiotemporal properties of geographic phenomena, (2) development of a framework to characterize events and processes that can be inferred from GIS databases, and (3) development of a method to assess similarity of events and processes based on the temporal sequences of spatiotemporal properties. Collectively the studies contribute to scientific understanding of spatiotemporal components of geographic processes and technological advances in representation and analysis

    Human dynamics in the age of big data: a theory-data-driven approach

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    The revolution of information and communication technology (ICT) in the past two decades have transformed the world and people’s lives with the ways that knowledge is produced. With the advancements in location-aware technologies, a large volume of data so-called “big data” is now available through various sources to explore the world. This dissertation examines the potential use of such data in understanding human dynamics by focusing on both theory- and data-driven approaches. Specifically, human dynamics represented by communication and activities is linked to geographic concepts of space and place through social media data to set a research platform for effective use of social media as an information system. Three case studies covering these conceptual linkages are presented to (1) identify communication patterns on social media; (2) identify spatial patterns of activities in urban areas and detect events; and (3) explore urban mobility patterns. The first case study examines the use of and communication dynamics on Twitter during Hurricane Sandy utilizing survey and data analytics techniques. Twitter was identified as a valuable source of disaster-related information. Additionally, the results shed lights on the most significant information that can be derived from Twitter during disasters and the need for establishing bi-directional communications during such events to achieve an effective communication. The second case study examines the potential of Twitter in identifying activities and events and exploring movements during Hurricane Sandy utilizing both time-geographic information and qualitative social media text data. The study provides insights for enhancing situational awareness during natural disasters. The third case study examines the potential of Twitter in modeling commuting trip distribution in New York City. By integrating both traditional and social media data and utilizing machine learning techniques, the study identified Twitter as a valuable source for transportation modeling. Despite the limitations of social media such as the accuracy issue, there is tremendous opportunity for geographers to enrich their understanding of human dynamics in the world. However, we will need new research frameworks, which integrate geographic concepts with information systems theories to theorize the process. Furthermore, integrating various data sources is the key to future research and will need new computational approaches. Addressing these computational challenges, therefore, will be a crucial step to extend the frontier of big data knowledge from a geographic perspective. KEYWORDS: Big data, social media, Twitter, human dynamics, VGI, natural disasters, Hurricane Sandy, transportation modeling, machine learning, situational awareness, NYC, GI

    Big Data for Traffic Estimation and Prediction: A Survey of Data and Tools

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    Big data has been used widely in many areas including the transportation industry. Using various data sources, traffic states can be well estimated and further predicted for improving the overall operation efficiency. Combined with this trend, this study presents an up-to-date survey of open data and big data tools used for traffic estimation and prediction. Different data types are categorized and the off-the-shelf tools are introduced. To further promote the use of big data for traffic estimation and prediction tasks, challenges and future directions are given for future studies

    Discovery of Spatiotemporal Event Sequences

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    Finding frequent patterns plays a vital role in many analytics tasks such as finding itemsets, associations, correlations, and sequences. In recent decades, spatiotemporal frequent pattern mining has emerged with the main goal focused on developing data-driven analysis frameworks for understanding underlying spatial and temporal characteristics in massive datasets. In this thesis, we will focus on discovering spatiotemporal event sequences from large-scale region trajectory datasetes with event annotations. Spatiotemporal event sequences are the series of event types whose trajectory-based instances follow each other in spatiotemporal context. We introduce new data models for storing and processing evolving region trajectories, provide a novel framework for modeling spatiotemporal follow relationships, and present novel spatiotemporal event sequence mining algorithms
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