The service is available (within Microsoft corpnet), which provides a user with the practically fastest path with less online computation and according to your departure time.
T-drive is a smart driving direction services based on GPS trajectories of a large number of taxis. It helps user find out the practically fastest path to a destination at a given departure time.
A prototype has been built based on a real-world trajectory dataset generated by 30,000 taxis in Beijing in a period of 3 monthes.
Three Challenges in T-Drive:
- Intelligence Modeling
- Data sparseness
- Low-sampling-rate of the trajectories
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First, taxi drivers are experienced drivers who can usually find out the fastest path to send passengers to a destination based on their knowledge. Second, the GPS-equipped taxis are mobile sensors probing the traffic flows on road surfaces. So, the taxi trajectories contain the information of both human knowledge of experienced drivers and traffic patterns.
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Refer to our T-Drive publication (opens in new tab) on ACM SIGSPATIAL GIS 2010, which won the best paper runner up award and was featured on the homepage MIT Technology review.
1. landmark graph building
2. Travel time estimation
3. two-stage routing.
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We evaluate the system with extensive experiments and in-the-field evaluations. The results show that our method signi cantly outperforms both the speed-constraint-based and the real-time-traffic-based method in the aspects of e ectiveness and efficiency. Given over 5 taxis in a region of 1km2, more than 60% of our routes are faster than that of the speed-constraint-based approach, and 50% of these routes are at least 20% faster than the latter. On average, our method can save about 16% of time for a trip, i.e., 5 minutes per 30-minutes driving.
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- “A driving route made just for you (opens in new tab)“, MIT Technology Review, 2011.8.30. (Another Chinese version (opens in new tab)).
- Adding cabbie know-how to online maps (opens in new tab), Technology Review, news featured on the first page, 2010.11.6
- Follow that cab! Racing Google Maps on city streets (opens in new tab), NewScientist, 2010.11.5
- Microsoft aims to improve maps with GPS data from 33,000 Beijing cab drivers (opens in new tab), engadget, 2010.11.9
- Cabbies help Microsoft Improve Online Mapping (opens in new tab), Wired, November 10, 2010.
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- International Patent. MS 328341.01, MS1-4911US, “Route Computation Based on Route-Oriented Vehicle Trajectories”, 12/28/2009
- US Patent. MS328342.01, MS1-4909US, “Map-Matching for Low-Sampling-Rate GPS Trajectories”, 12/30/2009