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1st Call for Papers
Workshop on Movement Pattern Analysis
14th September 2010, Zurich, Switzerland
In conjunction with the sixth international conference on Geographic
Information Science, GIScience 2010, 15-17th September, 2010
Aims and scope
Recent developments in movement pattern analysis reflect the broad interest in this field. Just as broad seems to be the methodological spectrum scientists develop to investigate movement patterns.
Although the plethora of application fields, in fact, calls for a wide spectrum of methodologies, it is difficult to find a common strategy in the community that would help in sharing results, exchanging methods as well as heading towards what would be an established theory on movement pattern analysis. It is the goal of this workshop to contribute to such a common view on methods of movement pattern analysis. For this purpose, concrete datasets will be moved into the centre of this workshop. The idea is to arrive at an answer to the question of what makes a useful benchmark dataset for movement pattern analysis. Such benchmark datasets could significantly help in the longterm goal to work on a common theory of movement pattern analysis, since benchmark datasets
provide means to compare different methods. Generally, movement pattern analysis endeavors to explicitly capture the space-time structure in data in order to meaningfully analyze moving objects.
Repositories of reference movement datasets are rare, partly due to privacy, security or copyright restrictions. Also, for datasets that are available in the public domain metadata is often scarce, as semantically annotating movement data is expensive and hence mostly copyrighted. It is assumed, however, that the spatial information science community, with a lot of data acquisition techniques available today, is in the position to have among its members significant amounts of movement data that could be potentially developed into reference datasets. It is, however, not entirely clear what defines a useful benchmark dataset, for evaluating and comparing methodologies.
This workshop aims specifically to bring together researchers with interests in spatial information theory and method development with application researchers, institutions, and private companies that collect, manage, and analyze movement data in some given application context.
This workshop covers any form of movement of trackable entities in unconstrained and network spaces, including but not limited to:
• Traffic and transportation, e.g. car tracking data, fleet management data
• People, e.g. pedestrians, shoppers, crowds
• Mobile phone applications
• Anmial movement
Workshop outline
We are interested in receiving short discussion papers (maximally 1500 words, excluding figures and references). They have to present a specific problem in the context of movement analysis. In particular each paper should present the dataset of a specific use case in an application context or in the context of a specific research question. Any information underlining the data sets potential as a benchmark data set is considered a plus (context of observed process, metadata, data structure, observable patterns and processes, research questions or tasks addressed). The inclusion of maps and figures is encouraged. Those datasets will play an essential role during the entire workshop.
Young researchers are particularly encouraged to present their research problems.
The workshop program will be complemented by working in groups. Each group will have to analyze one of the presented reference problems in the context of the presented methodologies. Moreover, each group will have to work on how their reference problem generalizes to other application problems.
The outcomes will be discussed in the plenum. Thereby, an overall goal consists in the identification of what distinguishes benchmark datasets and their corresponding analytical problems and what needs to be done by the community in order to arrive at a repository of useful benchmark datasets and problems.
Organisers
Roland Billen, Geomatics Unit, Department of Geography University of Liege, Belgium
Björn Gottfried, Centre for Computing and Communication Technologies University of Bremen, Germany
Alexander Klippel, GeoVISTA Center, Department of Geography, Pennsylvania State University, USA
Patrick Laube, Department of Geography University of Zurich - Zurich, Switzerland
Nico Van de Weghe, Department of Geography, CartoGIS Cluster Ghent University, Belgium
Important dates
Deadline for short papers and overview presentations: May 23st 2010
Notification of acceptance: June 15th
Invited Speakers
Christophe Claramunt, Naval Academy Research Institute
Harvey J. Miller, Department of Geography. University of Utah
Kathleen Stewart-Hornsby, Department of Geography, University of Iowa
Program Committee
Gennady Andrienko, Fraunhofer Institute, Sankt-Augustin, Germany
Eliseo Clementini, University of L'Aquila, Italy
Eduardo Dias, Geodan S&R, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Matt Duckham, University of Melbourne, Australia
Andrew Frank, TU Vienna, Austria
Joachim Gudmundsson, NICTA, Sydney, Australia
Leonidas Guibas, Stanford University, USA
Donna Peuquet, Pennsylvania State University, USA
Erik Willems, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Stephan Winter, University of Melbourne, Australia
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