• DocumentCode
    138347
  • Title

    A refined limit on the predictability of human mobility

  • Author

    Smith, Graeme ; Wieser, Romain ; Goulding, James ; Barrack, Duncan

  • Author_Institution
    Horizon Digital Econ. Res., Univ. of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    24-28 March 2014
  • Firstpage
    88
  • Lastpage
    94
  • Abstract
    It has been recently claimed that human movement is highly predictable. While an upper bound of 93% predictability was shown, this was based upon human movement trajectories of very high spatiotemporal granularity. Recent studies reduced this spatiotemporal granularity down to the level of GPS data, and under a similar methodology results once again suggested a high predictability upper bound (i.e. 90% when movement was quantized down to a spatial resolution approximately the size of a large building). In this work we reconsider the derivation of the upper bound to movement predictability. By considering real-world topological constraints we are able to achieve a tighter upper bound, representing a more refined limit to the predictability of human movement. Our results show that this upper bound is between 11-24% less than previously claimed at a spatial resolution of approx. 100m×100m, with a greater improvement for finer spatial resolutions. This indicates that human mobility is potentially less predictable than previously thought. We provide an in-depth examination of how varying the spatial and temporal quantization affects predictability, and consider the impact of corresponding limits using a large set of real-world GPS traces. Particularly at fine-grained spatial quantizations, where a significant number of practical applications lie, these new (lower) upper limits raise serious questions about the use of location information alone for prediction, contributing more evidence that such prediction must integrate external variables.
  • Keywords
    behavioural sciences computing; quantisation (signal); GPS data; Global Positioning Systems; fine-grained spatial quantizations; high predictability upper bound; human mobility predictability; human movement trajectories; spatiotemporal granularity; temporal quantization; topological constraints; Global Positioning System; Logic gates; XML;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom), 2014 IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Budapest
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PerCom.2014.6813948
  • Filename
    6813948