FAST: frequency-aware indexing for spatio-textual data streams

AR Mahmood, AM Aly, WG Aref - 2018 IEEE 34th international …, 2018 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
2018 IEEE 34th international conference on data engineering (ICDE), 2018ieeexplore.ieee.org
Many applications need to process massive streams of spatio-textual data in real-time
against continuous spatio-textual queries. For example, in location-aware ad targeting
publish/subscribe systems, it is required to disseminate millions of ads and promotions to
millions of users based on the locations and textual profiles of users. In this paper, we study
indexing of continuous spatio-textual queries. There exist several related spatio-textual
indexes that typically integrate a spatial index with a textual index. However, these indexes …
Many applications need to process massive streams of spatio-textual data in real-time against continuous spatio-textual queries. For example, in location-aware ad targeting publish/subscribe systems, it is required to disseminate millions of ads and promotions to millions of users based on the locations and textual profiles of users. In this paper, we study indexing of continuous spatio-textual queries. There exist several related spatio-textual indexes that typically integrate a spatial index with a textual index. However, these indexes usually have a high demand for main-memory and assume that the entire vocabulary of keywords is known in advance. Also, these indexes do not successfully capture the variations in the frequencies of keywords across different spatial regions and treat frequent and infrequent keywords in the same way. Moreover, existing indexes do not adapt to the changes in workload over space and time. For example, some keywords may be trending at certain times in certain locations and this may change as time passes. This affects the indexing and searching performance of existing indexes significantly. In this paper, we introduce FAST, a Frequency-Aware Spatio-Textual index for continuous spatio-textual queries. FAST is a main-memory index that requires up to one third of the memory needed by the state-of-the-art index. FAST does not assume prior knowledge of the entire vocabulary of indexed objects. FAST adaptively accounts for the difference in the frequencies of keywords within their corresponding spatial regions to automatically choose the best indexing approach that optimizes the insertion and search times. Extensive experimental evaluation using real and synthetic datasets demonstrates that FAST is up to 3x faster in search time and 5x faster in insertion time than the state-of-the-art indexes.
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