The current age of increased people mobility calls for a better understanding of how people move: how many places does an individual commonly visit, what are the semantics of these places, and how do people get from one place to another. We show that the number of places visited by each person (Points of Interest - PoIs) is regulated by some properties that are statistically similar among individuals. Subsequently, we present a PoIs classification in terms of their relevance on a per-user basis. In addition to the PoIs relevance, we also investigate the variables that describe the travel rules among PoIs in particular, the spatial and temporal distance. As regards the latter, existing works on mobility are mainly based on spatial distance. ...
International audienceThe pervasiveness of smartphones has shaped our lives, social norms, and the s...
The availability of massive digital traces of human whereabouts has offered a series of novel insigh...
Data reflecting movements of people, such as GPS or GSM tracks, can be a source of information about...
Our era of increased people mobility requires a better understanding of how people move, how many ar...
The recent availability of human mobility traces has driven a new wave of research -- on human movem...
The recent availability of human mobility traces has driven a new wave of research on human movement...
People mobility enormously augmented in the last decades. However, despite the increased possibiliti...
The increased availability of GPS-enabled devices makes possible to collect location data for mining...
Recent seminal works on human mobility have shown that individuals constantly exploit a small set of...
© Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016. The pervasive employments of Location-based So...
The availability of massive digital traces of individuals is offering a series of novel insights on ...
none3noIn this paper, we extend some ideas of statistical physics to describe the properties of huma...
International audienceUnderstanding human mobility patterns is crucial to fields such as urban mobil...
The pervasiveness of smartphones has modeled our lives, the social norms, and structure that dictate...
The modeling of human mobility is adopting new directions due to the increasing availability of big ...
International audienceThe pervasiveness of smartphones has shaped our lives, social norms, and the s...
The availability of massive digital traces of human whereabouts has offered a series of novel insigh...
Data reflecting movements of people, such as GPS or GSM tracks, can be a source of information about...
Our era of increased people mobility requires a better understanding of how people move, how many ar...
The recent availability of human mobility traces has driven a new wave of research -- on human movem...
The recent availability of human mobility traces has driven a new wave of research on human movement...
People mobility enormously augmented in the last decades. However, despite the increased possibiliti...
The increased availability of GPS-enabled devices makes possible to collect location data for mining...
Recent seminal works on human mobility have shown that individuals constantly exploit a small set of...
© Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016. The pervasive employments of Location-based So...
The availability of massive digital traces of individuals is offering a series of novel insights on ...
none3noIn this paper, we extend some ideas of statistical physics to describe the properties of huma...
International audienceUnderstanding human mobility patterns is crucial to fields such as urban mobil...
The pervasiveness of smartphones has modeled our lives, the social norms, and structure that dictate...
The modeling of human mobility is adopting new directions due to the increasing availability of big ...
International audienceThe pervasiveness of smartphones has shaped our lives, social norms, and the s...
The availability of massive digital traces of human whereabouts has offered a series of novel insigh...
Data reflecting movements of people, such as GPS or GSM tracks, can be a source of information about...