What is also interesting is that the same same study seems to have been
spun differently by the Agence France Presse report, notwithstanding some
problematic Privacy-related issues to cellphone tracking practices...it
now has public health benefits!! :-):

-----------

Tracking cell phone use could help curb epidemics -- study
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/infotech/view/20080605-140857/Tracking-cell-phone-use-could-help-curb-epidemics----study

Agence France-Presse
First Posted 08:23:00 06/05/2008

PARIS -- Scientists searching for patterns in seemingly random human
movements have found that people, in the aggregate, go about their daily
lives with mathematical regularity, according to a study published
Thursday.

Tracking the movements of 100,000 people over six months through cell
phone use, the researchers discovered that highly variable individual
travel patterns collapsed into a single mathematical formula of
probability.

"Despite the diversity of their travel histories, humans follow simple
reproducible patterns," said co-author Cesar Hidalgo of Northeastern
University in Boston.

Truly creatures of habit, most people migrate consistently to the same
handful of spots, with occasional "long hops" to more distant locations,
said the study, published in the British journal Nature.

"Less than three percent of people move regularly over more than 100 miles
(170 kilometers)," Hidalgo told AFP.

Predicting the movement of people during an epidemic, after an earthquake
or in a traffic jam following a big football match has always been
something of a guessing game for scientists, despite the huge stakes
involved.

Companies whose profitability depends on knowing where individuals go and
when -- billboard advertisers, transporters, housing developers -- have
also been unable to crack the inner codes of human movement.

Part of the problem has been the lack of reliable data. One study of human
mobility traced the distribution of half-a-million bank notes through a
population, using the bills as a proxy for movement.

But notes change hands from owner to owner, breaking the thread of an
individual's migration.

A team lead by Albert-Laszlo Barabasi, a professor at Northeastern,
figured out a clever way around this shortcoming.

Randomly selecting 100,000 anonymous cell phone users from a pool of six
million, the researchers tracked individual movement through calls made
and received by recording the location of the nearest relay tower.

Despite a total of more than 16 million "hops" from one spot to the next,
"the resulting statistics show a strikingly small scatter" and thus add
weight to the mathematical laws they disclose, commented Nature in an
editorial.

Even without knowing why people go where they go, the patterns uncovered
could, for example, provide crucial data on how to curb the spread of a
communicable disease.

Up to now, epidemic models lacked detailed data on human mobility and had
to rely on assumptions about random motion or computer simulations, said
Hidalgo.

"Our results show that there are indeed some simple rules that can be used
to describe human mobility," he said, adding that the same type of
problems apply to urban planning and traffic forecasting.

"Epidemiologists will no longer be forced to work with highly
oversimplified models of infection rates and disease spread," commented
Nature.





> Hello all,
>
> I have not found the original paper in Nature, but it seems that the
> study has also riven rise to some questions about tracking via use of
> the mobile phone.
>
> Rich L.
>
> http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/06/04/cell.tracking.ap/index.html
>
> >
>


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