1 / 23

Measuring Serendipity: Connecting People, Locations and Interests in a Mobile 3G Network

Ionut Trestian Supranamaya Ranjan Aleksandar Kuzmanovic Antonio Nucci Northwestern University Narus Inc. Measuring Serendipity: Connecting People, Locations and Interests in a Mobile 3G Network. http://networks.cs.northwestern.edu. http://www.narus.com. Online Social Networks.

varen
Download Presentation

Measuring Serendipity: Connecting People, Locations and Interests in a Mobile 3G Network

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ionut Trestian Supranamaya Ranjan Aleksandar Kuzmanovic Antonio Nucci Northwestern University Narus Inc. Measuring Serendipity: Connecting People, Locations and Interests in a Mobile 3G Network http://networks.cs.northwestern.edu http://www.narus.com

  2. Online Social Networks • Social network websites among the most popular websites on the Internet

  3. Mobage Town • Japan based mobile social network • 11 million users • Allows users to: • Send messages, chat in communities, exchange music, read pocket novels, write blogs, play games etc.

  4. Loopt • Allows contacts to visualize one another’s location using mobile phones and share information • Available for Sprint, Verizon, At&t, T-Mobile on devices such as BlackBerry, iPhone and gPhone

  5. Other Location Based Services • Sharing your location with friends (BuddyBeacon –for iPhone) • Location based searches (EarthComber) • Notifications about places and events around you (LightPole) • Tagging locations (Metosphere)

  6. Research Questions How likely are we to meet in our daily lives people who share common interests in the cyber domain? What is the relationship between mobility properties, location, and application affiliation in the cyber domain? 3,162,818 packet data sessions generated by 281,394 clients in 1196 locations (Base Stations) across a large metropolitan area

  7. Extracting Human Movement Base Station 1 1. Intra-session movement 2. Inter-session movement Base Station 2 RADA Start (contains BSID) RADA Update (contains BSID) RADA Stop (contains BSID) RADIUS Server Note that we have only a sampled view of human movement. How well can we do?

  8. Extracting Human Movement Despite sampled observations we still do a good job at understanding user movement. The ordering of the curves accounts for the larger time span which can accommodate larger travel distances Most human movement is over short distances.

  9. Extracting Application Interest Social networking website Music download website Dating website http://www.singlesnet.com http://www.facebook.com http://www.mp3.com Keyword based URL mining

  10. Rule Definitions

  11. Rule Mining Location A Rule support: Number of people present at A Rule confidence: Number of people that move from A to B Rule confidence probability: confidence/support Location B (A, B, w, δ) W δ

  12. Rule Statistics Increase in number of active users at commute hours (8AM and 5PM) Movement rules are more active during day time, also less active during weekend Total confidence of rules

  13. Location Rank – Application Accesses Music downloads – anti-correlation with mobility span Mail – correlation with mobility span Social netw. – dominates the medium mobility range

  14. Location Ranking Comfort zone 3 All users spend most of their time in their top 3 locations

  15. Location Rank – Application Accesses Comfort zone Music downloads, Dating, Trading heavily accessed in the comfort zone Social netw. News and Mail tend to be accessed outside too Note that Dating is accessed more in the Comfort Zone

  16. Hotspots • Via rule mining we detect highly active locations • We identify 4 types of such locations • Noon hotspots – 28 such locations • Highly active during Noon hours • Night hotspots – 62 such locations • Highly active during night hours • Day-office hotspots – 23 such locations • Highly active during day hours • Evening hotspots – 8 such locations • Highly active during the evening

  17. Biased Application Access at Hotspots Normalized user affiliation Despite similar userbase at hotspots during the seven day interval, application accesses are highly skewed towards certain applications. Application accesses hotspots

  18. Application Access - Time of Day Application accesses non hotspots However the bias in application access is not entirely due to an illusive “time of day” effect ! Application accesses non hotspot times

  19. Regional analysis – Spectral Clustering Using spectral clustering we: Cluster locations as belonging to regions Cluster users as belonging to regions Spectral clustering doesn’t make any assumptions on the shape of the clusters(opposed to k-means)

  20. Regional Analysis – Research issues • Two relevant issues for location based services: • Time independent interactions(useful for tagging services) – part of user trajectories overlap irrespective of the time of the movement • Time dependent interactions – same location same time • Questions: • How many distinct people with the same interests do we meet? • Strongly dependent on userbase (probability to meet people higher in clusters with bigger userbase) • How often do we meet people?

  21. Time Independent Interactions Cluster 1 has a higher number of interactions per location mainly because of larger hotspot density 27/162 (Cluster 1)> 26/257 (Cluster 4) for night hotspots

  22. Who Will Win the Interaction Race? Mobile users clearly win the interaction race However it pays off to spend time in popular locations

  23. Conclusions • First study at such a large scale aimed at correlating mobility, location, and application usage • Provided new insights from user perspective, location perspective, and provider perspective that shows the enormous location based service potential

More Related