Mobility in an online world: Difference between revisions
From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki
mNo edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Participants== | ==Participants== | ||
* [[Michael Szell]] | * [[Michael Szell]] | ||
Line 6: | Line 4: | ||
* [[Kang Zhao]] | * [[Kang Zhao]] | ||
* [[Drew Levin]] | * [[Drew Levin]] | ||
==Intro== | ==Intro== | ||
Line 31: | Line 28: | ||
== | ==Meetings== | ||
* June 10, 5 P.M., lecture room |
Revision as of 05:21, 11 June 2010
Participants
Intro
The topology of this online world can be expressed as a network, where sectors are nodes (placed on a cartesian grid) and wormholes are links between nearby sectors. A second type of link, the X-hole, links distant sectors, thus giving the universe a small-world property. Players live and move in this environment. For a fixed time for each day and each of the 10^4-10^5 players, we know their locations. (All data is fully anonymized!)
Tasks
- Extract data of universe
- Bring topology data in network format (adjacency list / sparse matrix)
- Visualize network, e.g. in PAJEK
- Extract mobility data of players
- Bring them in reasonable format (time-series). E.g. Time-series of daily hops.
- Analyze data
- Formulate research questions
- Find literature on mobility, etc.
- Write paper (tex)
Research Questions
to do
Meetings
- June 10, 5 P.M., lecture room