Publications
Where and why users “check in”
Abstract
The emergence of location based social network (LBSN) services makes it possible to study individuals’ mobility patterns at a fine-grained level and to see how they are impacted by social factors. In this study we analyze the check-in patterns in LBSN and observe significant temporal clustering of check-in activities. We explore how self-reinforcing behaviors, social factors, and exogenous effects contribute to this clustering and introduce a framework to distinguish these effects at the level of individual check-ins for both users and venues. Using check-in data from three major cities, we show not only that our model can improve prediction of future check-ins, but also that disentangling of different factors allows us to infer meaningful properties of different venues.
- Date
- June 19, 2014
- Authors
- Yoon-Sik Cho, Greg Ver Steeg, Aram Galstyan
- Journal
- Proc. of AAAI
- Volume
- 14
- Pages
- 269-275