Abstract

Social sensing has become an emerging and pervasive sensing paradigm to collect timely observations of the physical world from human sensors. In this paper, we study the problem of geolocating abnormal traffic events using social sensing. Our goal is to infer the location (i.e., geographical coordinates) of the abnormal traffic events by exploring the location entities from the content of social media posts. Two critical challenges exist in solving our problem: (i) how to accurately identify the location entities related to the abnormal traffic event from the content of social media posts? (ii) How to accurately estimate the geographic coordinates of the abnormal traffic event from the set of identified location entities? To address the above challenges, we develop a Social sensing based Abnormal Traffic Geolocalization (SAT-Geo) framework to accurately estimate the geographic coordinates of abnormal traffic events by exploring the syntax-based patterns in the content of social media posts and the geographic information associated with the location entities from the social media posts. We evaluate the SAT-Geo framework on three real-world Twitter datasets collected from New York City, Los Angeles, and London. Evaluation results demonstrate that SAT-Geo significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines by effectively identifying location entities related to the abnormal traffic events and accurately estimating the geographic coordinates of the events.

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