Query operations for moving objects database systems
Proceedings of the 8th ACM international symposium on Advances in geographic information systems
A Framework for Generating Network-Based Moving Objects
Geoinformatica
DynaMark: A Benchmark for Dynamic Spatial Indexing
MDM '03 Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Mobile Data Management
Generating Network-Based Moving Objects
SSDBM '00 Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Scientific and Statistical Database Management
ST--ACTS: a spatio-temporal activity simulator
GIS '06 Proceedings of the 14th annual ACM international symposium on Advances in geographic information systems
On the design of energy-efficient location tracking mechanism in location-aware computing
Mobile Information Systems
A stochastic viewpoint on the generation of spatiotemporal datasets
ICCSA'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on Computational Science and Its Applications - Volume Part II
A group based insert manner for storing enormous data rapidly in intelligent transportation system
ICIC'05 Proceedings of the 2005 international conference on Advances in Intelligent Computing - Volume Part II
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The spatio-temporal database research community has just started to investigate benchmarking issues. On one hand we would rather have a benchmark that is representative of real world applications, in order to verify the expressiveness of proposed models. On the other hand, we would like a benchmark that offers a sizeable workload of data and query sets, which could obviously stress the strengths and weaknesses of a broad range of data access methods.This paper offers a framework for spatio-temporal data sets generator, a first step towards a full bench-mark for the large real world application field of "smoothly" moving objects with few or no restrictions in motion. The driving application is the modelling of fishing ships where the ships go in the direction of the most attractive shoals of fish while trying to avoid storm areas.Fishes are themselves attracted by plankton areas. Ships are moving points; plankton or storm areas are regions with fixed center but moving shape; and shoals are moving regions. The specification is written in such a way that the users can easily adjust generation model parameters.