| Literature DB >> 22574061 |
Stefan van der Spek1, Jeroen van Schaick, Peter de Bois, Remco de Haan.
Abstract
THE ENHANCEMENT OF GPS TECHNOLOGY ENABLES THE USE OF GPS DEVICES NOT ONLY AS NAVIGATION AND ORIENTATION TOOLS, BUT ALSO AS INSTRUMENTS USED TO CAPTURE TRAVELLED ROUTES: as sensors that measure activity on a city scale or the regional scale. TU Delft developed a process and database architecture for collecting data on pedestrian movement in three European city centres, Norwich, Rouen and Koblenz, and in another experiment for collecting activity data of 13 families in Almere (The Netherlands) for one week. The question posed in this paper is: what is the value of GPS as 'sensor technology' measuring activities of people? The conclusion is that GPS offers a widely useable instrument to collect invaluable spatial-temporal data on different scales and in different settings adding new layers of knowledge to urban studies, but the use of GPS-technology and deployment of GPS-devices still offers significant challenges for future research.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviour; GPS; Mapping; Movement; People; Tracking
Year: 2009 PMID: 22574061 PMCID: PMC3348829 DOI: 10.3390/s90403033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.Approach to the field work.
Figure 2.General data processing scheme for GPS experiments.
Figure 3.Principle of deployment of GPS devices in the Spatial Metro case. Each trip contains the complete, walked pattern of that day for one participant and is delimited by leaving the car park (location A or B) and returning to it.
Figure 4.Principle of deployment of GPS devices in the Almere case. Each trip is delimited by leaving the home ‘base’ and by returning to it.
Figure 6.The principal difference between a ‘parallel’ and ‘serial’ urban system.
Figure 7.Two ‘extreme’ types of GPS tracks from the Almere experiment: degree of match between both ways on a return trip. Background map is based on the Almere street pattern.
Figure 8.GPS tracking data for one week of the Almere experiment: superimposition of activity patterns of 13 households (40 people), red dots indicate housing location. Background based on the Almere street pattern.