Title :
Detecting Crowdedness Spot in City Transportation
Author :
Siyuan Liu ; Yunhuai Liu ; Ni, Lionel ; Minglu Li ; Jianping Fan
Author_Institution :
Heinz Coll., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Abstract :
Crowdedness spot is a crowded area with an abnormal number of objects. Detecting the crowdedness spots of moving vehicles in an urban area is essential to many applications. An intuitive method is to cluster the objects in areas to get the density information. Unfortunately, the data capturing vehicle mobility possesses some new features, such as highly mobile environments, supremely limited size of sample objects, and nonuniform biased samples, and all these features have raised new challenges that make traditional density-based clustering algorithms fail to retrieve the real clustering property of objects, making the results less meaningful. In this paper, we propose a novel nondensity-based approach called mobility-based clustering. The key idea is that sample objects are employed as “sensors” to perceive the vehicle crowdedness in nearby areas using their instant mobility rather than the “object representatives.” As such, the mobility of samples is naturally incorporated. Several key factors beyond the vehicle crowdedness have been identified, and techniques to compensate these effects are accordingly proposed. Furthermore, taking the detected crowdedness spots as a label of the taxi, we can identify one particular taxi to be a crowdedness taxi that crosses a number of different crowdedness spots. We evaluate the performance of our methods and baseline approaches based on real traffic situations (to retrieve the real traffic crowdedness) and real-life data sets. Finally, the interesting findings are provided for further discussions.
Keywords :
automated highways; mobile computing; pattern clustering; traffic engineering computing; transportation; city transportation; data capturing vehicle mobility; density information; density-based clustering algorithms; highly mobile environments; mobility-based clustering; moving vehicle crowdedness spot detection; nondensity-based approach; object clustering property; object representatives; real traffic situations; real-life data sets; sample mobility; sensors; urban area; Accuracy; Cities and towns; Clustering algorithms; Global Positioning System; Roads; Sensors; Vehicles; Data mining; intelligent transportation systems; vehicular and wireless technologies;
Journal_Title :
Vehicular Technology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TVT.2012.2231973