Literature DB >> 31379465

How many days are enough?: capturing routine human mobility.

Kevin Stanley1, Eun-Hye Yoo2, Tuhin Paul1, Scott Bell3.   

Abstract

Wedding mobile phone sensor technology and human spatial behaviour has great potential. The ubiquity of Global Positioning Systems (GPS) technology has made gathering data about human mobility simpler, more precise, and with higher fidelity, providing minute-by-minute records of the locations of cohorts from dozens of participants. While this data provides a strong basis for Geographic Information Science research, it also constitutes an invasion of the participants' privacy and can provide more information than researchers require to answer their questions. As an ethical and practical consideration, researchers should gather only as much data as they need. In this paper, we take three weeks of GPS traces from over a hundred student participants in mobile phone-based tracking studies and show that fewer than 14 days of data is necessary to establish complete activity spaces. We define 'complete' as the point at which marginal information gains become negligible according to a pairwise temporal analysis of the Kullback-Leibler (KL) divergence of the spatial (bivariate) histogram through time. For the fixed level of information difference, observable in the data, impacts due to individual variability, population composition, and spatial resolution are evident. However, all populations at each level of resolution examined in the paper demonstrated convergence to low divergence levels occurred within a matter of days, and to negligible information gain in less than two weeks. The methods described in the paper represent a novel metric useful to understand the interaction between measurements and information in human mobility.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Activity spaces; Global Positioning Systems (GPS); Kullback–Leibler (KL) divergence

Year:  2018        PMID: 31379465      PMCID: PMC6677398          DOI: 10.1080/13658816.2018.1434888

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Geogr Inf Sci        ISSN: 1365-8816            Impact factor:   4.186


  3 in total

1.  Quality of hybrid location data drawn from GPS-enabled mobile phones: Does it matter?

Authors:  Eun-Hye Yoo; John E Roberts; Youngseob Eum; Youdi Shi
Journal:  Trans GIS       Date:  2020-01-27

2.  How Short Is Long Enough? Modeling Temporal Aspects of Human Mobility Behavior Using Mobile Phone Data.

Authors:  Eun-Hye Yoo
Journal:  Ann Am Assoc Geogr       Date:  2019-05-20

3.  Dynamic Urban Environmental Exposures on Depression and Suicide (NEEDS) in the Netherlands: a protocol for a cross-sectional smartphone tracking study and a longitudinal population register study.

Authors:  Marco Helbich
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-08-10       Impact factor: 2.692

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.