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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Visual Exploration of Big Spatio-Temporal Urban Data: A Study of New York City Taxi Trips

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TLDR
A new model is proposed that allows users to visually query taxi trips and is able to express a wide range of spatio-temporal queries, and it is flexible in that not only can queries be composed but also different aggregations and visual representations can be applied, allowing users to explore and compare results.
Abstract
As increasing volumes of urban data are captured and become available, new opportunities arise for data-driven analysis that can lead to improvements in the lives of citizens through evidence-based decision making and policies. In this paper, we focus on a particularly important urban data set: taxi trips. Taxis are valuable sensors and information associated with taxi trips can provide unprecedented insight into many different aspects of city life, from economic activity and human behavior to mobility patterns. But analyzing these data presents many challenges. The data are complex, containing geographical and temporal components in addition to multiple variables associated with each trip. Consequently, it is hard to specify exploratory queries and to perform comparative analyses (e.g., compare different regions over time). This problem is compounded due to the size of the data-there are on average 500,000 taxi trips each day in NYC. We propose a new model that allows users to visually query taxi trips. Besides standard analytics queries, the model supports origin-destination queries that enable the study of mobility across the city. We show that this model is able to express a wide range of spatio-temporal queries, and it is also flexible in that not only can queries be composed but also different aggregations and visual representations can be applied, allowing users to explore and compare results. We have built a scalable system that implements this model which supports interactive response times; makes use of an adaptive level-of-detail rendering strategy to generate clutter-free visualization for large results; and shows hidden details to the users in a summary through the use of overlay heat maps. We present a series of case studies motivated by traffic engineers and economists that show how our model and system enable domain experts to perform tasks that were previously unattainable for them.

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Citations
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A Systematic Review of Visualization in Building Information Modeling

TL;DR: A novel taxonomy is used to identify main application areas and analyze commonly employed techniques of visualization in current BIM practice, and highlights future research opportunities brought forth by the unique features of BIM.
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Weaving seams with data: Conceptualizing City APIs as elements of infrastructures:

TL;DR: It is argued that City APIs as elements of infrastructures reveal how urban renewal processes become crucial sites of socio-political contestation between data science, technological development, urban management, and civic participation.
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Adaptively Exploring Population Mobility Patterns in Flow Visualization

TL;DR: A system which deciphers, transforms, queries, and visualizes the records from the millions of users in a city, namely MobiHash, which collects phone call records over base stations and indexes them by utilizing a Voronoi division of the urban space.
Proceedings Article

Scheduling for transfers in pickup and delivery problems with very large neighborhood search

TL;DR: The Very Large Neighborhood Search with Transfers (VLNS-T) algorithm is introduced to form schedules for the PDP-T, in which vehicles plan to transfer items between one another to form more efficient schedules.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

High-Performance Geospatial Analytics in HyPerSpace

TL;DR: HyPerSpace is presented, an extension to the high-performance main-memory database system HyPer developed at the Technical University of Munich, capable of processing geospatial queries with sub-second latencies.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Exploratory spatio-temporal visualization: an analytical review

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