Limits of Predictability in Human Mobility
Top Cited Papers
- 19 February 2010
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 327 (5968) , 1018-1021
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1177170
Abstract
Predictable Travel Routines: While people rarely perceive their actions to be random, current models of human activity are fundamentally stochastic. Processes that rely on human mobility patterns, like the prediction of new epidemics, traffic engineering, or city planning, could benefit from highly accurate predictive models. To investigate the predictability of human dynamics, Song et al. (p. 1018 ) used the recorded trajectories of millions of mobile phone users, collected by mobile phone companies and anonymized for research purposes. They hypothesized that given the wide range of travel patterns that different users follow, there would be significant differences between their predictability as well: Users who travel less should be easier to predict than those who are constantly on the road. Surprisingly, there was 93% predictability across the whole user base, and individuals' predictability did not in general fall significantly below 80%.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Understanding individual human mobility patternsNature, 2008
- Power-law and exponential tails in a stochastic priority-based model queuePhysical Review E, 2008
- Some fundamental aspects of Lévy flightsChaos, Solitons, and Fractals, 2007
- Invasion Percolation and Critical Transient in the Barabási Model of Human DynamicsPhysical Review Letters, 2007
- Modeling the Worldwide Spread of Pandemic Influenza: Baseline Case and Containment InterventionsPLoS Medicine, 2007
- Modeling bursts and heavy tails in human dynamicsPhysical Review E, 2006
- The scaling laws of human travelNature, 2006
- Reality mining: sensing complex social systemsPersonal and Ubiquitous Computing, 2005
- The origin of bursts and heavy tails in human dynamicsNature, 2005
- Stochastic Process with Ultraslow Convergence to a Gaussian: The Truncated Lévy FlightPhysical Review Letters, 1994