Cascading Walks Model for Human Mobility Patterns
Authored by Xiao-Pu Han, Xiang-Wen Wang, Xiao-Yong Yan, Bing-Hong Wang
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124800
Sponsors:
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Background
Uncovering the mechanism behind the scaling laws and series of anomalies
in human trajectories is of fundamental significance in understanding
many spatio-temporal phenomena. Recently, several models, e.g. the
explorations-returns model (Song et al., 2010) and the radiation model
for intercity travels (Simini et al., 2012), have been proposed to study
the origin of these anomalies and the prediction of human movements.
However, an agent-based model that could reproduce most of empirical
observations without priori is still lacking.
Methodology/Principal Findings
In this paper, considering the empirical findings on the correlations of
move-lengths and staying time in human trips, we propose a simple model
which is mainly based on the cascading processes to capture the human
mobility patterns. In this model, each long-range movement activates
series of shorter movements that are organized by the law of localized
explorations and preferential returns in prescribed region.
Conclusions/Significance
Based on the numerical simulations and analytical studies, we show more
than five statistical characters that are well consistent with the
empirical observations, including several types of scaling anomalies and
the ultraslow diffusion properties, implying the cascading processes
associated with the localized exploration and preferential returns are
indeed a key in the understanding of human mobility activities.
Moreover, the model shows both of the diverse individual mobility and
aggregated scaling displacements, bridging the micro and macro patterns
in human mobility. In summary, our model successfully explains most of
empirical findings and provides deeper understandings on the emergence
of human mobility patterns.
Tags
Communication
behavior
predictability
scaling laws