Relating spatial constraints to temporal-network properties in face-to-face interactions

Determine the relationship between spatial constraints in physical space and the resulting properties of temporal networks constructed from face-to-face proximity interactions among moving agents, in order to clarify how spatial motion and geometry shape temporal-contact patterns.

Background

The paper studies temporal contact networks generated by simple two-dimensional particle dynamics (Random Walk, Active Brownian Particles, Vicsek model) to probe which temporal properties of empirical face-to-face interaction networks can be reproduced by minimal spatial models.

Despite prior modeling efforts, including dynamic proximity models and an influential 2D random-walk-based framework with attractiveness, the precise connection between the spatial constraints underlying motion and the temporal-network properties observed in face-to-face data has not been fully articulated. This work highlights that inter-contact duration distributions can be explained via first-return processes, but it explicitly notes that the broader relationship between spatial constraints and temporal-network properties remains unclear.

References

However, the relation between spatial constraints and the properties of the temporal network of interactions remain unclear.

Simple crowd dynamics to generate complex temporal contact networks  (2405.06508 - Masoumi et al., 2024) in Introduction (Section 1)