Urban Anomalies: A Simulated Human Mobility Dataset with Injected Anomalies
Hossein Amiri, Ruochen Kong, Andreas Zufle

TL;DR
This paper introduces a comprehensive simulated human mobility dataset with injected anomalies, enabling research in location-based anomaly detection while addressing privacy concerns and ground truth limitations.
Contribution
The paper provides a novel, extensive simulated dataset with various anomaly types and degrees, created using an urban simulation model, to facilitate anomaly detection research.
Findings
Datasets include normal and anomalous phases with ground truth labels.
Anomalies are injected through behavioral changes like social, schedule, and interest shifts.
Multiple methods for selecting agents to inject anomalies are proposed.
Abstract
Human mobility anomaly detection based on location is essential in areas such as public health, safety, welfare, and urban planning. Developing models and approaches for location-based anomaly detection requires a comprehensive dataset. However, privacy concerns and the absence of ground truth hinder the availability of publicly available datasets. With this paper, we provide extensive simulated human mobility datasets featuring various anomaly types created using an existing Urban Patterns of Life Simulation. To create these datasets, we inject changes in the logic of individual agents to change their behavior. Specifically, we create four of anomalous agent behavior by (1) changing the agents' appetite (causing agents to have meals more frequently), (2) changing their group of interest (causing agents to interact with different agents from another group). (3) changing their social…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · Migration, Aging, and Tourism Studies · Insurance, Mortality, Demography, Risk Management
