Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Uncovering individual and collective human dynamics from mobile phone records

254   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Juli\\'an Candia
 Publication date 2007
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

Novel aspects of human dynamics and social interactions are investigated by means of mobile phone data. Using extensive phone records resolved in both time and space, we study the mean collective behavior at large scales and focus on the occurrence of anomalous events. We discuss how these spatiotemporal anomalies can be described using standard percolation theory tools. We also investigate patterns of calling activity at the individual level and show that the interevent time of consecutive calls is heavy-tailed. This finding, which has implications for dynamics of spreading phenomena in social networks, agrees with results previously reported on other human activities.



rate research

Read More

We analyze the synchronous firings of the salamander ganglion cells from the perspective of the complex network viewpoint where the networks links reflect the correlated behavior of firings. We study the time-aggregated properties of the resulting network focusing on its topological features. The behavior of pairwise correlations has been inspected in order to construct an appropriate measure that will serve as a weight of network connection.
Identifying key players in collective dynamics remains a challenge in several research fields, from the efficient dissemination of ideas to drug target discovery in biomedical problems. The difficulty lies at several levels: how to single out the role of individual elements in such intermingled systems, or which is the best way to quantify their importance. Centrality measures describe a nodes importance by its position in a network. The key issue obviated is that the contribution of a node to the collective behavior is not uniquely determined by the structure of the system but it is a result of the interplay between dynamics and network structure. We show that dynamical influence measures explicitly how strongly a nodes dynamical state affects collective behavior. For critical spreading, dynamical influence targets nodes according to their spreading capabilities. For diffusive processes it quantifies how efficiently real systems may be controlled by manipulating a single node.
Uncovering meaningful regularities in complex oscillatory signals is a challenging problem with applications across a wide range of disciplines. Here we present a novel approach, based on the Hilbert transform (HT). We show that temporal periodicity can be uncovered by averaging the signal in a moving window of appropriated length, $tau$, before applying the HT. By analyzing the variation of the mean rotation period, $overline{T}$, of the Hilbert phase as a function of $tau$, we discover well-defined plateaus. In many geographical regions the plateau corresponds to the expected one-year solar cycle; however, in regions where SAT dynamics is highly irregular, the plateaus reveal non-trivial periodicities, which can be interpreted in terms of climatic phenomena such as El Ni~no. In these regions, we also find that Fourier analysis is unable to detect the periodicity that emerges when $tau$ increases and gradually washes out SAT variability. The values of $overline{T}$ obtained for different $tau$s are then given to a standard machine learning algorithm. The results demonstrate that these features are informative and constitute a new approach for SAT time series classification. To support these results, we analyse synthetic time series generated with a simple model and confirm that our method extracts information that is fully consistent with our knowledge of the model that generates the data. Remarkably, the variation of $overline{T}$ with $tau$ in the synthetic data is similar to that observed in real SAT data. This suggests that our model contains the basic mechanisms underlying the unveiled periodicities. Our results demonstrate that Hilbert analysis combined with temporal averaging is a powerful new tool for discovering hidden temporal regularity in complex oscillatory signals.
Rapid urbanization and climate change trends are intertwined with complex interactions of various social, economic, and political factors. The increased trends of disaster risks have recently caused numerous events, ranging from unprecedented category 5 hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean to the COVID-19 pandemic. While regions around the world face urgent demands to prepare for, respond to, and to recover from such disasters, large-scale location data collected from mobile phone devices have opened up novel approaches to tackle these challenges. Mobile phone location data have enabled us to observe, estimate, and model human mobility dynamics at an unprecedented spatio-temporal granularity and scale. The COVID-19 pandemic has spurred the use of mobile phone location data for pandemic and disaster response. However, there is a lack of a comprehensive review that synthesizes the last decade of work leveraging mobile phone location data and case studies of natural hazards and epidemics. We address this gap by summarizing the existing work, and pointing promising areas and future challenges for using data to support disaster response and recovery.
213 - Jiannan Wang , Sen Pei , Wei Wei 2017
The stability of Boolean networks has attracted much attention due to its wide applications in describing the dynamics of biological systems. During the past decades, much effort has been invested in unveiling how network structure and update rules will affect the stability of Boolean networks. In this paper, we aim to identify and control a minimal set of influential nodes that is capable of stabilizing an unstable Boolean network. By minimizing the largest eigenvalue of a modified non-backtracking matrix, we propose a method using the collective influence theory to identify the influential nodes in Boolean networks with high computational efficiency. We test the performance of collective influence on four different networks. Results show that the collective influence algorithm can stabilize each network with a smaller set of nodes than other heuristic algorithms. Our work provides a new insight into the mechanism that determines the stability of Boolean networks, which may find applications in identifying the virulence genes that lead to serious disease.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا