New structures to solve aggregated queries for trips over public transportation networks
Autor: | Brisaboa, Nieves R., Fariña, Antonio, Galaktionov, Daniil, Rodeiro, Tirso V., Rodríguez, M. Andrea |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Proc. of the 25th International Symposium on String Processing and Information Retrieval (SPIRE), Lima, Peru, October 9-11th, pp 85-101 (2018) |
Druh dokumentu: | Working Paper |
DOI: | 10.1007/978-3-030-00479-8_8 |
Popis: | Representing the trajectories of mobile objects is a hot topic from the widespread use of smartphones and other GPS devices. However, few works have focused on representing trips over public transportation networks (buses, subway, and trains) where a user's trips can be seen as a sequence of stages performed within a vehicle shared with many other users. In this context, representing vehicle journeys reduces the redundancy because all the passengers inside a vehicle share the same arrival time for each stop. In addition, each vehicle journey follows exactly the sequence of stops corresponding to its line, which makes it unnecessary to represent that sequence for each journey. To solve data management for transportation systems, we designed a conceptual model that gave us a better insight into this data domain and allowed us the definition of relevant terms and the detection of redundancy sources among those data. Then, we designed two compact representations focused on users' trips (TTCTR) and on vehicle trips (AcumM), respectively. Each approach owns some strengths and is able to answer some queries efficiently. We include experimental results over synthetic trips generated from accurate schedules obtained from a real network description (from the bus transportation system of Madrid) to show the space/time trade-off of both approaches. We considered a wide range of different queries about the use of the transportation network such as counting-based or aggregate queries regarding the load of any line of the network at different times. Comment: This research has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sk{\l}odowska-Curie Actions H2020-MSCA-RISE-2015 BIRDS GA No. 690941 |
Databáze: | arXiv |
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