19 pages, 19 figuresInternational audienceDaily interactions naturally define social circles. Individuals tend to be friends with the people they spend time with and they choose to spend time with their friends, inextricably entangling physical location and social relationships. As a result, it is possible to predict not only someone's location from their friends' locations but also friendship from spatial and temporal co-occurrence. While several models have been developed to separately describe mobility and the evolution of social networks, there is a lack of studies coupling social interactions and mobility. In this work, we introduce a new model that bridges this gap by explicitly considering the feedback of mobility on the formation of...
Humans are social animals and they interact with differ-ent communities of friends to conduct differ...
Abstract—We propose to use social networking data to validate mobility models for pervasive mobile a...
© 2018, The Author(s). Social interactions among humans create complex networks and – despite a rece...
International audienceDaily interactions naturally define social circles. Individuals tend to be fri...
Connections established by users of online social networks are influenced by mechanisms such as pref...
Online social networking services entice millions of users to spend hours every day interacting with...
A common finding in analyses of geographic mobility is a strong association between past movement an...
Studies using massive, passively collected data from communication technologies have revealed many u...
A common finding in analyses of geographic mobility is a strong association between past movement an...
Almost all work on mobile ad hoc networks relies on simulations, which, in turn, rely on realistic m...
Social activities account for a large amount of travel, yet due to their irregularity and the number...
Our understanding of how individual mobility patterns shape and impact the social network is limited...
In mobile computing research area, it is highly desirable to understand the characteristics of user ...
Almost all work on mobile ad hoc networks relies on simulations, which, in turn, rely on realistic m...
Planning and operations in urban spaces are strongly affected by human mobility behavior. A better u...
Humans are social animals and they interact with differ-ent communities of friends to conduct differ...
Abstract—We propose to use social networking data to validate mobility models for pervasive mobile a...
© 2018, The Author(s). Social interactions among humans create complex networks and – despite a rece...
International audienceDaily interactions naturally define social circles. Individuals tend to be fri...
Connections established by users of online social networks are influenced by mechanisms such as pref...
Online social networking services entice millions of users to spend hours every day interacting with...
A common finding in analyses of geographic mobility is a strong association between past movement an...
Studies using massive, passively collected data from communication technologies have revealed many u...
A common finding in analyses of geographic mobility is a strong association between past movement an...
Almost all work on mobile ad hoc networks relies on simulations, which, in turn, rely on realistic m...
Social activities account for a large amount of travel, yet due to their irregularity and the number...
Our understanding of how individual mobility patterns shape and impact the social network is limited...
In mobile computing research area, it is highly desirable to understand the characteristics of user ...
Almost all work on mobile ad hoc networks relies on simulations, which, in turn, rely on realistic m...
Planning and operations in urban spaces are strongly affected by human mobility behavior. A better u...
Humans are social animals and they interact with differ-ent communities of friends to conduct differ...
Abstract—We propose to use social networking data to validate mobility models for pervasive mobile a...
© 2018, The Author(s). Social interactions among humans create complex networks and – despite a rece...