Finding a Needle in the Haystack: Predicting the Location of Lost People Using Agent-Based Modeling and Behavioral Inertia

John Nguyen, Caroline Joseph, Bailey Richardson, Roy Hayes, Ricardo Pakula, Robert Koester
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Abstract

Around 100,000 persons go missing annually in the US. Many factors go into predicting the location of a lost person, like geography, climate, age, health status, gender, disabilities, walking speed, and more. Technology and machine learning can advance the success and speed of search and rescue (SAR) missions. Agent-based modeling is a popular method for predicting the location of a lost person. A recently published paper by Hashimoto et al. demonstrated the ability to tune an agent-based model's parameters so that its emergent behavior statistically matches the lost hiker data in International Search and Rescue Database.Hashimoto et al.'s work assumed that a lost person randomly selects a reorienting behavior at every time step. We build upon the work performed by Hashimoto et al. by adding the concept of inertia as a parameter. We hypothesize that a lost person will likely continue their reorienting behavior for some time before changing. We used International Search and Rescue Incident Database SAR incidents with geolocation and Sava et al.'s scoring methodology to compare our inertia-enabled agent-based model with Hashimoto et al.'s model and validate our results. We find our model outperforms Hashimoto et al. within our testing set.
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大海捞针:使用基于代理的建模和行为惯性预测失散人员的位置
在美国,每年大约有10万人失踪。很多因素都可以用来预测失踪者的位置,比如地理位置、气候、年龄、健康状况、性别、残疾、步行速度等等。技术和机器学习可以提高搜救任务的成功率和速度。基于智能体的建模是预测失踪者位置的常用方法。Hashimoto等人最近发表的一篇论文展示了调整基于代理的模型参数的能力,使其紧急行为在统计上与国际搜索和救援数据库中丢失的徒步旅行者数据相匹配。桥本等人的研究假设一个迷路的人在每个时间步随机选择一个重新定向的行为。我们在Hashimoto等人的工作基础上添加了惯性概念作为参数。我们假设一个迷路的人在改变之前可能会继续他们的重新定向行为一段时间。我们使用国际搜索和救援事件数据库SAR事件与地理定位和Sava等人的评分方法来比较我们的基于惯性的基于代理的模型与Hashimoto等人的模型,并验证我们的结果。我们发现我们的模型在我们的测试集中优于Hashimoto等人。
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