Abstract This research is related to the author’s actual experience about the COVID-19 pandemic. The author had to drive from Grand Forks, North Dakota to Columbus, Ohio to visit his family. Traveling via airplanes or buses was not considered because the coronavirus may prevail in small, crowded space. However, driving is not without risk since they had to stop from time to time to do the tasks like filling up the gas tank, using restrooms, or buying food. There are numerous routes from Grand Forks to Washington D.C. To reduce the risk, they tried to take a “safe” route and avoid the “hotspots” like Chicago or Minneapolis as much as possible. This research uses the technique of incremental direction searches to find the “best” routes between two locations. There are numerous routes between two distant locations. Finding the “best” route most likely is an NP-complete problem, so exhaustive methods should not be considered. This research uses the incremental direction searches to find the route. Instead of finding the route at once, the proposed method finds the next direction whenever a major intersection is encountered based on the number of COVID-19 cases on each direction. Many accomplishments will be achieved by this research. Three of them are listed as follows:
Keywords COVID-19, Location-based Services, Smartphones, Mobile Computing, and Incremental Searches WMSCI-2020-Hu.pdf and WMSCI-2020-Hu.pptx |