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48th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases, VLDB 2022 ; 15(12):3606-3609, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2056499

ABSTRACT

Kernel density visualization (KDV) has been widely used in many geospatial analysis tasks, including traffic accident hotspot detection, crime hotspot detection, and disease outbreak detection. Although KDV can be supported by many scientific, geographical, and visualization software tools, none of these tools can support high-resolution KDV with large-scale datasets. Therefore, we develop the first versatile programming library, called LIBKDV, based on the set of our complexity-optimized algorithms. Given the high efficiency of these algorithms, LIBKDV not only accelerates the KDV computation but also enriches KDV-based geospatial analytics, including bandwidth-tuning analysis and spatiotemporal analysis, which cannot be natively and feasibly supported by existing software tools. In this demonstration, participants will be invited to use our programming library to explore interesting hotspot patterns on large-scale traffic accident, crime, and COVID-19 datasets. © 2022, VLDB Endowment. All rights reserved.

2.
Proceedings of the Vldb Endowment ; 14(12):2655-2658, 2021.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1744575

ABSTRACT

Kernel density visualization (KDV) is a commonly used visualization tool for many spatial analysis tasks, including disease outbreak detection, crime hotspot detection, and traffic accident hotspot detection. Although the most popular geographical information systems, e.g., QGIS, and ArcGIS, can also support this operation, these solutions are not scalable to generate a single KDV for datasets with million-scale data points, let alone to support exploratory operations (e.g., zoom in, zoom out, and panning operations) with KDV in near real-time (< 5 sec). In this demonstration, we develop a near real-time visualization system, called KDV-Explorer, that is built on top of our prior study on the efficient kernel density computation. Participants will be invited to conduct some kernel density analysis on three large-scale datasets (up to 1.3 million data points), including the traffic accident dataset, crime dataset and COVID-19 dataset. We will also compare the performance of our solution and the solutions in QGIS and ArcGIS.

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