Current Trends in Reality Mining: Jyoti More, Chelpa Lingam
Current Trends in Reality Mining: Jyoti More, Chelpa Lingam
Current Trends in Reality Mining: Jyoti More, Chelpa Lingam
Abstract: We live in a technology driven society where, each one of us continuously leaves digital traces
behind. Our mobile phones, for example, continuously sense our movements and interactions. This sociogeographic data could be continuously captured by millions of people around the world and promises to reveal important behavioral clues about humans. Mining patterns of human behavior from large-scale mobile phone data has deep potential impact on society. Reality Mining, pioneered by Nathan Eagle and Alex Pentland, (Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)) is defined as the study of human social behavior based on wireless mobile phone sensed data. Reality mining is based on data collected by sensors in mobile phones, cars, security cameras, RFID ('smart card') readers, and others, all allow for the measurement of human physical and social activity. Applications of reality mining are in diverse fields like epidemiology, psychology, urban planning, security, marketing and even analysis of poverty. This paper attempts to overview and analyzes the current trends in reality mining. It also presents the current challenges in this field.
Keywords: Reality Mining, Social Network Mining, Context aware computing I. INTRODUCTION
Reality Mining is defined as the study of human social behavior based on wireless mobile phone sensed data by Nathan Eagle and Alex Pentland, (Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). It is the collection and analysis of machine-sensed environmental data pertaining to human social behavior, with the goal of identifying predictable patterns of behavior. Mobile phones are promising electronic devices as sensors due to their vast usage over the world on a daily continuous basis, and also due to the numerous types of sensors embedded in the device. The mobile phone has developed, due to its paramount nature, from a simple communication device to include many other tools such as a cameras, browsers, games, calendars, alarm clocks, and will surely continue to develop in the future. All of these forms of data can be analyzed to reveal details about human behavior. Sensors are everywhere, continuously gathering information as we live our daily lives. Whether using email, the telephone, a bank machine, or even simpler activities such as driving, using a photocopy machine, and a camera, all of these activities leave traces of our behavior. Recently, the communication devices have been viewed from an engineering perspective as sensors, capturing data which scientists in many disciplines are very excited about. This data potentially impacts every one of us as researchers begin to study the possibilities of their use. Research using mobile phone data has mostly focused on location-driven data analysis, more specifically, using Global Positioning System (GPS) data to predict transportation modes to predict user destinations or paths, and to predict daily step count. Other location-driven tasks have made use of Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) data for indoor localization or WiFi for large-scale localization . There are several works related to activity modeling from location-driven phone sensor data. CitySense is a mobile application which uses GPS and WiFi data to summarize hotspots of activity a city, which can then be used to make recommendations to people regarding, for example, preferred restaurants. Applications to society as a whole are being investigated in terms of epidemiology and psychology, urban planning, security, and even in the analysis of poverty. This paper focuses on the possibilities, scope and challenges related to reality mining. A brief review has been carried out for this purpose.
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Fig 2.: Using Social Network Mining to estimate strengths of social relations 2.2 Social network mining In social network mining, we apply data mining algorithms to study large-scale social networks. Social network mining has attracted a lot of attention for many reasons. For example, studying large social networks allows us to understand social behaviors in different contexts. In addition, by analyzing the roles of the people involved in the network, we can understand how information and opinions spread within the network, and who are the most influential people . In addition, since social network users may receive too much information from time to time, social network mining can be used to support them by providing recommendations and filtering information on their behalf.
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REFERENCES Books:
[1] [2] Earl Cox , Fuzzy Modeling and Genetic Algorithms for Data mining and Exploration, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers/ Elsevier B. Schilit, N. Adams, R. Want, Context-Aware Computing Applications Proceedings of Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications, 1994
Theses:
[3] Katayoun Farrahi, A Probabilistic Approach to Socio-Geographic Reality Mining THESIS No5018 (2011) submitted to the Faculty of Science and Technology Engineer cole Polytechnique Fdrale de Lausanne to obtain the degree of Doctor of Science
Journal Papers:
[4] Nathan Eagle & Alex (Sandy) Pentland, Reality mining: sensing complex social systems Pers Ubiquit Comput (2006) 10: 255 268, Springer-Verlag London Limited 2005
Proceedings Papers:
[5] [6] N. Eagle, A. Pentland, and D. Lazer, Inferring Social Network Structure using Mobile Phone Data, Proceedings of theNational Academy of Sciences (PNAS), vol. 106, no. 36, pp.1527415278, September 2007 Huiqi Zhang; Dantu, R.; Cangussu, J.W. , Socioscope: Human Relationship and Behavior Analysis in Social Networks, IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, Volume: 41, Issue: 6, Publication Year: 2011 , Page(s): 1122 1143 Zhang, Huiqi; Dantu, Ram, Predicting social ties in mobile phone networks, IEEEInternational Conference on Intelligence and Security Informatics(ISI)2010, pages: 25-30 Farrahi, K.; Gatica-Perez, D. , Probabilistic Mining of Socio-Geographic Routines From Mobile Phone Data, IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing, Volume: 4, Issue: 4 Publication Year: 2010 , Page(s): 746 755 Simoes, J. Magedanz, T., Can you predict human behavior?, 14 th International Conference on Intelligence in Next Generation Networks (ICIN), 2010, Page(s): 1 6 Xu Yang; Yapeng Wang; Dan Wu; Ma, A., K-means based clustering on mobile usage for social network analysis purpose, IEEE, 6 th International Conference on Advanced Information Management and Service(IMS), 2010, Page(s)-223-228 Huiqi Zhang; Dantu R., Quantifying the presence of Phone Users, 5 th IEEE Conference on Consumer Communication and Networking Conference, 2008, Page(s): 883 - 887 Michal Ficek, Lukas Kencl, Spatial Extension of the Reality Mining Dataset, Proceedings of IEEE 7 th International Conference on Mobild Adhoc and Sensor Systems(MASS), 2010 Zhenhui Li, Cindy Xide Lin, Bolin Ding, Jiawei Han, Mining Significant time intervals for relationship detection Proceedings of the 12 th international conference on Advances in spatial and temporal databases, 2011 Xiaowen Dong, Pascal Frossard, Pierre Vandergheynst, Nikolai Nefedov, A regularization framework for mobile social network analysis IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, 2011
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