Northeastern University
College of Computer and Information Science
  • Contact Us

Search

  • Explore CCIS
    • About the College
      • Dean’s Message
    • Undergraduate Programs
      • Advising
      • Degree Programs
      • Minor in Computer Science
      • Minor in Information Science
      • Tutoring
      • Scholarships
      • Student Awards
    • Graduate Programs
      • Degree Programs
      • Current Students
    • Co-op
    • People and Organizations
      • Faculty
      • Administrative Staff
      • Student Organizations
    • Contact Us
    • Research
      • Research Groups
      • Centers and Institutes
    • Technical Help
  • Prospective Students
  • Current Students
  • Alumni
  • Employers
Layout Image
  • About the College
    • Dean’s Message
    • CCIS Videos
  • Undergraduate Programs
    • Advising
    • Degree Programs
      • Combined Majors with the College of Art, Media, and Design
      • Combined Majors with the D’Amore-McKim School of Business
      • Combined Majors with College of Science
    • Minor in Computer Science
    • Minor in Information Science
    • Scholarships
      • Bradley E. Bailey Scholarship
      • Darwin Scholarship
      • Jane K. Wenzinger Scholarship Fund
      • Department of Defense Information Assurance Scholarship Program
      • NSF Federal Cyber Service: Scholarship for Service
    • Student Awards and Research
    • Tutoring
  • Graduate Programs
    • Degree Programs
      • Ph.D. in Computer Science
        • Admission Requirements
        • Academic Requirements
        • Time and Time Limitation
        • Transfer Credit
        • Approved Courses
        • Electives Outside the College
        • Specimen Curriculum
        • Academic Review Process
      • Ph.D. in Information Assurance
        • Admissions Requirements
        • Academic Requirements
        • Time and Time Limitation
        • Transfer Credit
        • Specimen Curriculum
        • Program Faculty
        • Contact Us
      • Ph.D. in Personal Health Informatics
      • M.S. in Computer Science
        • Admissions Requirements
        • Academic Requirements
        • Academic Probation
        • Time and Time Limitation
        • Transfer Credit
        • Approved Courses
        • Specimen Academic Schedule
        • Reading and Project Courses
        • Master’s Thesis
        • Request More Information
      • M.S. in Information Assurance
        • Admissions Requirements
        • Academic Requirements
        • Specimen Academic Schedule
        • Financial Aid and Scholarships
        • Faculty
        • Request More Information- MSIA
      • M.S. in Health Informatics
        • Program Overview
        • Master’s Degree
        • Certificates
        • Course Descriptions
        • Testimonials
        • Faculty
        • Careers
        • Student Profiles
        • Apply
        • Request More Information- MSHI
      • ALIGN
    • Apply
    • Scholarships
    • FAQ
    • Current Students
      • Course Descriptions
      • Course Schedules
      • Graduate Guidebook
      • Commencement
      • Forms
      • Travel Support
      • Wiki
      • Jobs
      • New Student Page
        • MyNeu Account
        • Course Registration
        • Health Insurance Requirements
        • ISSI Orientation
        • CCIS Orientation
        • CCIS Email Account
        • Paying Your Bill
        • Husky ID Cards
        • Online Learning
        • Housing
        • Parking
        • Public Transportation
  • Research
    • Research Groups
      • Algorithms and Theory
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Data
      • Educational Research
      • Formal Methods
      • Game Design
      • Network Science
      • Personal Health Informatics
      • Programming Languages
      • Security
      • Software Engineering
      • Systems
    • Centers and Institutes
  • Co-op
    • Information for Students
      • FAQ
      • Information for New Students
      • Information for Upperclass Students
      • Information for Graduate Students
      • Prospective
      • Forms
    • Information for Employers
    • Co-op Manual
      • Steps to Finding A Job
      • Taking a Course
      • Academic Standards
    • Research & Data
      • Assessment
    • Calendar
    • Surveys & Evaluations
      • Student Evaluation
      • Employer Evaluation
  • People and Organizations
    • Faculty
    • Administrative Staff
    • Student Organizations
  • News & Events
    • News Archive
    • Events
    • Distinguished Speakers Series

Doing the math on where people go

By itiadmin
Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Chaoming Song helped create a mathematical model that can simulate human mobility over
the course of years. Photo by Mary Knox Merill.

Network scientists at Northeastern University have created a mathematical model that can simulate human mobility over the course of several months or even years.

The results of the study were reported this week in the online edition of Nature Physics magazine.

Distinguished Professor of Physics Albert-László Barabási and his team uncovered the patterns characterizing human mobility by analyzing the real-time movements of three million anonymous cell-phone users and the anonymized positional records of one thousand users whose location was recorded every hour for a two-week period.

A previous study conducted by Barabási’s team found that human mobility is 93 percent predictable in the short-term, a result that could be applied to revamping our system of traffic control.

The team’s newest research findings could be applied to solving much larger problems in fields as diverse as public health, city planning and economic forecasting, says Barabási, who is also director of Northeastern’s world-leading Center for Complex Network Research.

Using the new model, network scientists could accurately predict the spread of biological pathogens in a human population or track the proliferation of mobile-phone viruses.

“Our model captures the universal properties of human mobility,” said Chaoming Song, research associate for the Center for Complex Network Research and lead author of the paper. “That is, if the model generates huge amounts of trajectories, it raises quite similar patterns as the real ones across a population.”

Conventional models for human mobility have relied unsuccessfully on tracking the mobility patterns of animals, said Song. That hasn’t worked because humans generally travel short distances and follow simple reproducible patterns, whereas animals regularly move over hundreds or even thousands of miles.

The team found that people only move across about 12 miles of their neighborhoods each year, Song said, adding that the number of distinct places that humans visit decreases rapidly over time. Migrating animals explore as much as 6,000 miles.

Additional coauthors on the paper, titled “Modeling the Scaling Properties of Human Mobility,” are Tal Koren, a research associate in the Center for Complex Network Research, and Pu Wang, a postdoctoral research associate in civil and environmental engineering at MIT and a former research assistant at the Center for Complex Network Research.

Categories : Uncategorized
Northeastern University
  • My NEU
  • Find Faculty & Staff
  • Find A – Z
  • Emergency Information
  • Search

360 Huntington Ave. Boston, Massachusetts 02115 • 1 (617) 373-2000

© 2013 Northeastern University

  • twitter
  • facebook
  • youtube