An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.

Understanding human mobility in outdoor environments is critical for many applications including traffic modeling, urban planning, and epidemic modeling. Using data collected from mobile devices, researchers have studied human mobility in outdoor environments and found that human mobility is highly...

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Main Authors: Yan Wang, Ali Yalcin, Carla VandeWeerd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243503
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spelling doaj-c60f7fed65134eb6b37115a33a84a7722021-03-04T12:53:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024350310.1371/journal.pone.0243503An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.Yan WangAli YalcinCarla VandeWeerdUnderstanding human mobility in outdoor environments is critical for many applications including traffic modeling, urban planning, and epidemic modeling. Using data collected from mobile devices, researchers have studied human mobility in outdoor environments and found that human mobility is highly regular and predictable. In this study, we focus on human mobility in private homes. Understanding this type of human mobility is essential as smart-homes and their assistive applications become ubiquitous. We model the movement of a resident using ambient motion sensor data and construct a chronological symbol sequence that represents the resident's movement trajectory. Entropy rate is used to quantify the regularity of the resident's mobility patterns, and an upper bound of predictability is estimated. However, the presence of visitors and malfunctioning sensors result in data that is not representative of the resident's mobility patterns. We apply a change-point detection algorithm based on penalized contrast function to detect these changes, and to identify the time periods when the data do not completely reflect the resident's activities. Experimental results using the data collected from 10 private homes over periods of 178 to 713 days show that human mobility at home is also highly predictable in the range of 70% independent of variations in floor plans and individual daily routines.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243503
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yan Wang
Ali Yalcin
Carla VandeWeerd
spellingShingle Yan Wang
Ali Yalcin
Carla VandeWeerd
An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yan Wang
Ali Yalcin
Carla VandeWeerd
author_sort Yan Wang
title An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
title_short An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
title_full An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
title_fullStr An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
title_full_unstemmed An entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
title_sort entropy-based approach to the study of human mobility and behavior in private homes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Understanding human mobility in outdoor environments is critical for many applications including traffic modeling, urban planning, and epidemic modeling. Using data collected from mobile devices, researchers have studied human mobility in outdoor environments and found that human mobility is highly regular and predictable. In this study, we focus on human mobility in private homes. Understanding this type of human mobility is essential as smart-homes and their assistive applications become ubiquitous. We model the movement of a resident using ambient motion sensor data and construct a chronological symbol sequence that represents the resident's movement trajectory. Entropy rate is used to quantify the regularity of the resident's mobility patterns, and an upper bound of predictability is estimated. However, the presence of visitors and malfunctioning sensors result in data that is not representative of the resident's mobility patterns. We apply a change-point detection algorithm based on penalized contrast function to detect these changes, and to identify the time periods when the data do not completely reflect the resident's activities. Experimental results using the data collected from 10 private homes over periods of 178 to 713 days show that human mobility at home is also highly predictable in the range of 70% independent of variations in floor plans and individual daily routines.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243503
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