Simple Distances for Trajectories via Landmarks

Abstract

We develop a new class of distances for objects including lines, hyperplanes, and trajectories, based on the distance to a set of landmarks. These distances easily and interpretably map objects to a Euclidean space, are simple to compute, and perform well in data analysis tasks. For trajectories, they match and in some cases significantly out-perform all state-of-the-art other metrics, can effortlessly be used in k-means clustering, and directly plugged into approximate nearest neighbor approaches which immediately out-perform the best recent advances in trajectory similarity search by several orders of magnitude. These distances do not require a geometry distorting dual (common in the line or halfspace case) or complicated alignment (common in trajectory case). We show reasonable and often simple conditions under which these distances are metrics.

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