Geo-tagged image is an ideal source for the discovery of popular travel places. However, the aspects of popular venues for daily-life purposes like dining and shopping are often missing in the mined locations from geo-tagged images. Fortunately check-in websites provide us a unique opportunity of analyzing people's preferences in their daily lives to complement the knowledge mined from geo-tagged images. This paper presents a novel approach for the discovery of Areas of Interest (AoI). By analyzing both geo-tagged images and check-ins, the approach exploits travelers' flavors as well as the preferences of daily-life activities of local residents to find AoI in a city. The proposed approach consists of two major steps. Firstly, we devise a d...
Geo-location data from social media offers us information, in new ways, to understand people's attit...
This paper presents PhotoTrip, an interactive online service which is able to recommend not widely k...
Geotagged photos on social media like Flickr explicitly indicate the trajectories of tourists. They ...
Geo-tagged image is an ideal source for the discovery of popular travel places. However, the aspects...
In the big data era, the social media data that contain users’ geographical locations are growing ex...
Living in the “era of social networking”, we are experiencing a data revolution, generating an aston...
In the big data era, the social media data that contain users' geographical locations are growi...
Abstract—Tourists face a great challenge when they gather information about places they want to visi...
In the era of big data, ubiquitous Flickr geotagged photos have opened a considerable opportunity fo...
In contrast to conventional studies of discovering hot spots, by analyzing geo-tagged images on Flic...
Databases of places have become increasingly popular to identify places of a given type that are clo...
Understanding the interests of tourists is a key skill for attraction managers to prepare plans and ...
Photo-sharing websites such as Flickr and Panoramio contain millions of geo-tagged images contribute...
There is an increasing trend of people leaving digital traces through social media. This reality ope...
Location-based service information, provided by social networks, provides new data sources and persp...
Geo-location data from social media offers us information, in new ways, to understand people's attit...
This paper presents PhotoTrip, an interactive online service which is able to recommend not widely k...
Geotagged photos on social media like Flickr explicitly indicate the trajectories of tourists. They ...
Geo-tagged image is an ideal source for the discovery of popular travel places. However, the aspects...
In the big data era, the social media data that contain users’ geographical locations are growing ex...
Living in the “era of social networking”, we are experiencing a data revolution, generating an aston...
In the big data era, the social media data that contain users' geographical locations are growi...
Abstract—Tourists face a great challenge when they gather information about places they want to visi...
In the era of big data, ubiquitous Flickr geotagged photos have opened a considerable opportunity fo...
In contrast to conventional studies of discovering hot spots, by analyzing geo-tagged images on Flic...
Databases of places have become increasingly popular to identify places of a given type that are clo...
Understanding the interests of tourists is a key skill for attraction managers to prepare plans and ...
Photo-sharing websites such as Flickr and Panoramio contain millions of geo-tagged images contribute...
There is an increasing trend of people leaving digital traces through social media. This reality ope...
Location-based service information, provided by social networks, provides new data sources and persp...
Geo-location data from social media offers us information, in new ways, to understand people's attit...
This paper presents PhotoTrip, an interactive online service which is able to recommend not widely k...
Geotagged photos on social media like Flickr explicitly indicate the trajectories of tourists. They ...