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MOBIHOC
2008
ACM

Using persistent homology to recover spatial information from encounter traces

14 years 11 months ago
Using persistent homology to recover spatial information from encounter traces
In order to better understand human and animal mobility and its potential effects on Mobile Ad-Hoc networks and Delay-Tolerant Networks, many researchers have conducted experiments which collect encounter data. Most analyses of these data have focused on isolated statistical properties such as the distribution of node inter-encounter times and the degree distribution of the connectivity graph. On the other hand, new developments in computational topology, in particular persistent homology, have made it possible to compute topological invariants from noisy data. These homological methods provide a natural way to draw conclusions about global structure based on collections of local information. We use persistent homology techniques to show that in some cases encounter traces can be used to deduce information about the topology of the physical space the experiment was conducted in, and detect certain changes in the space. We also show that one can distinguish between simulated encounter ...
Brenton D. Walker
Added 24 Dec 2009
Updated 24 Dec 2009
Type Conference
Year 2008
Where MOBIHOC
Authors Brenton D. Walker
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