ITSC 2024 Paper Abstract

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Paper FrAT14.12

Zheng, Zhipeng (Southern University of Science and Technology), Jiang, Yuchen (Southern University of Science and Technology), Zhang, Shiyao (Southern University of Science and Technology), Wei, Xuetao (Southern University of Science and Technology)

Siamese Multiple Attention Temporal Convolution Networks for Human Mobility Signature Identification

Scheduled for presentation during the Poster Session "Data Mining and Data Analysis" (FrAT14), Friday, September 27, 2024, 10:30−12:30, Foyer

2024 IEEE 27th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSC), September 24- 27, 2024, Edmonton, Canada

This information is tentative and subject to change. Compiled on October 14, 2024

Keywords Data Mining and Data Analysis, Off-line and Online Data Processing Techniques, Travel Behavior Under ITS

Abstract

The Human Mobility Signature Identification (HuMID) problem stands as a fundamental task within the realm of driving style representation, dedicated to discerning latent driving behaviors and preferences from diverse driver trajectories for driver identification. Its solutions hold significant implications across various domains (e.g., ride-hailing, insurance), wherein their application serves to safeguard users and mitigate potential fraudulent activities. Present HuMID solutions often exhibit limitations in adaptability when confronted with lengthy trajectories, consequently incurring substantial computational overhead. Furthermore, their inability to effectively extract crucial local information further impedes their performance. To address this problem, we propose a Siamese Multiple Attention Temporal Convolutional Network (Siamese MA-TCN) to capitalize on the strengths of both TCN architecture and multi-head self-attention, enabling the proficient extraction of both local and long-term dependencies. Additionally, we devise a novel attention mechanism tailored for the efficient aggregation of multi-scale representations derived from our model. Experimental evaluations conducted on two real-world taxi trajectory datasets reveal that our proposed model effectively extracts both local key information and long-term dependencies. These findings highlight the model’s outstanding generalization capabilities, demonstrating its robustness and adaptability across datasets of varying sizes.

 

 

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