Note:
This functionality is currently only supported in Map Viewer Classic (formerly known as Map Viewer). It will be available in a future release of the new Map Viewer.
The Reconstruct Tracks tool connects time-sequential points to tracks and summarizes features within the track. Tracks are identified by one or more track fields. The resulting layer displays the track as a line or an area, the count of features within a track that have been summarized, and any additional statistics that have been specified.
Workflow diagram
Analysis using GeoAnalytics Tools
Analysis using GeoAnalytics Tools is run using distributed processing across multiple ArcGIS GeoAnalytics Server machines and cores. GeoAnalytics Tools and standard feature analysis tools in ArcGIS Enterprise have different parameters and capabilities. To learn more about these differences, see Feature analysis tool differences.
Terminology
Term | Description |
---|---|
Geodesic | A line drawn on a sphere. A geodesic line drawn on the globe represents the curvature of the earth's geoid. |
Planar | A straight-line distance as measured on a flat surface (that is, a Cartesian plane). This is also referred to as Euclidean distance. |
Instant | A single moment in time represented by a start time and no end time. |
Interval | A duration of time represented by a start time and an end time. |
Examples
Hurricanes are some of the most violent types of storms that occur in the United States. To assess insurance rates, you want to know the paths that hurricanes have traveled to determine locations that have historically had high property damage and financial loss from hurricanes. You have access to hurricane location data across the United States in a single dataset, with a timestamp at each location. You want to summarize all the information to see a summary of values for all hurricanes. You can summarize your data using the hurricane tracks identifier to determine the statistics for each hurricane.
Usage notes
Reconstruct Tracks is run on point or area features. The input layer must be time enabled with features that represent an instant in time.
For linear results, only tracks that contain more than one point will be returned. If you apply a buffer, all features will be returned.
Input features will consist of time-enabled features that represent an instant in time. Results are line or area features that represent an interval in time. The start and end of the interval are determined by the time at the first and last features in a track.
The most basic calculation in a track will be a count of the number of features that have been summarized. Statistics (count, sum, minimum, maximum, range, mean, standard deviation, variance, and the first and last value in a track) can also be calculated on numerical fields, and statistics (count, any, and the first and last value in a track) can be calculated on string fields. The string statistic any returns a sample string from each track. The statistics will be calculated on each track separately.
The field or fields used to identify tracks will be returned in the results.
You can specify one or more fields to identify tracks. Tracks are represented by the unique combination of one or more track fields. For example, if the fields flightID and Destination are used as track identifiers, the features ID007, Solden and ID007, Tokoyo would be in two separate tracks, since they have different Destination field values.
You can optionally apply a buffer to your input features. When you apply a buffer, resulting tracks will be area features.
Buffers are created using a field or a buffer expression. To learn more about buffer expressions and formatting, see Use buffer expressions with GeoAnalytics Tools. You can apply a track-aware expression. For example, you could buffer the current feature by the mean of the field wind_speed for the previous three features in a track with the equation mean($track.field["wind_speed].history(-4, -1)).
When buffering input features, each input feature is buffered. Then a convex hull is generated to create an area track.
By default, tracks are created using a geodesic method. The method is applied to the following two components of the analysis:
- Tracks crossing the international date line—When using the geodesic method, input layers that cross the international date line will have tracks that correctly cross the international date line. This is the default. Your input layer or processing spatial reference must be set to a spatial reference that supports wrapping around the international date line, such as a global projection like World Cylindrical Equal Area.
- Buffers—Input features can optionally be buffered. To learn more about when to apply a geodesic or planar buffer, see Create buffers.
There are four ways to split tracks:
- Based on a time between inputs—Applies a time split
- At defined time intervals—Applies a time boundary
- Based on a distance between inputs—Applies a distance split
- Based on an Arcade expression—Applies a split expression
Applying a time split breaks any track apart when input data is further apart than the specified time. For example, if you had five features with the same track identifier and the times of [01:00, 02:00, 03:30, 06:00, 06:30] and set a time split of two hours, any features that are measured more than two hours apart will be split. In this example, the result would be a track with [01:00, 02:00, 03:30] and [06:00, 06:30], because the difference between 03:30 and 6:00 is greater than two hours.
Applying a time boundary segments tracks at a defined interval. For example, if you set the time boundary to be 1 day, starting at 9:00 AM on January 1, 1990, each track will be truncated at 9:00 AM for every day. This split is a fast way to accelerate computing time, as it quickly creates smaller tracks for analysis. If splitting by a recurring time boundary makes sense for your analysis, it is recommend for big data processing.
Applying a distance split breaks any track apart when input data is further apart than the specified distance. For example, if you set a distance split of 5 kilometers and sequential features greater than 5 kilometers apart would be part of a different track.
Applying a split expression splits tracks based on values, geometry, or time values. For example, you can split tracks when a field value is more than double the previous value in a track. To do this, using an example field named WindSpeed, you can use the following expression: var speed = TrackFieldWindow("WindSpeed", -1, 1); 2* speed[0] < speed[1]. Tracks split when the previous value (speed[0]) is less than two times the current value.
You can apply none, some, or all split options at the same time. All of the examples below use a gap split. The different results, assuming you apply a time split of 6 hours, a time boundary of 1 day, and distance split of 16 kilometers, are as follows:
Split option | Description |
---|---|
Six input points with a time and location. | Input points with the same identifier. The distance between the points is marked on the top of the dotted line, and the time of each point measurement is marked below the points. There are four splits on the timeline. The red splits represent the time boundary split of 1 day, starting at 12:00 AM. The blue split represents the distance split, when the distance between two points is greater than 16 km. The purple split represents the time split, when the temporal distance between two sequential points is greater than 6 hours. |
Example with no time split and no distance split. | |
Example with a time split of two hours. Any features greater than two hours apart are split into separate tracks. | |
Example with a time boundary of 1 day, starting at midnight. At each 1-day interval starting from the specified time (here 12:00 AM), a new track is created. | |
Example with a distance split of 16 kilometers. Any features greater than 16 kilometers apart (the features at 05:00 AM and 06:00 AM) are split into separate tracks. | |
Example with a time split of 6 hours and a time boundary of 1 day starting at 12:00 AM. Any features greater than six hours apart or that intersect with the time duration split at 12:00 AM are split into separate tracks. | |
Example with a time split of 6 hours and a distance split of 16 km. Any features greater than six hours apart (the features at 06:00 AM and 7:00 PM) or farther than 16 km apart are split into separate tracks. | |
Example with a distance split of 16 km and a time boundary of one starting at 12:00 AM. Any features greater than 16 km apart or that intersect with the time duration split at 12:00 AM are split into separate tracks. | |
Example with a distance split of 16 km, a time split of 6 hours, and a time boundary of one day starting at 12:00 AM. Any features greater than 16 km apart, or farther apart than 6 hours, or that intersect with the time duration split at 12:00 AM are split into separate tracks. |
When you split a track using a time split, distance split, or split expression, you can decide how segments between the split are created. A time boundary split will always create a gap. Track split options are available with ArcGIS Enterprise 10.9 or later. You have the following options:
- Gap—Create a gap between the two features that were split.
- Finish after—Create a segment that ends after the split.
- Start before—Create a segment that ends and starts before the split.
The following diagram shows an example of the split types:
Time split option | Description |
Five input points with a time and location | Five input points with the same identifier. The time of each point is marked below the dotted line. There is one split between 2:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m. for all examples. Each track is split into two segments between the third and fourth points on the track. The first track is green and the second is purple. How the tracks are split is defined by the split type parameter. |
Gap | Example with a gap between the two points that are split. The first track ends at the third point and the second track starts at the fourth point. This is the default. |
Finish after | Example in which the track finishes after the split, at the fourth point. The second track starts at the fourth point. |
Start before | Example in which the track splits before the split, at the third point. The second track starts at the third point. |
The following are examples of how it might make sense to define tracks using the split parameters and the field identifier parameter using an airline flight as an example:
- An aircraft feature has aircraft ID, flight ID, pilot name,start time and flight_maneuver fields.
The flight_maneuver field represents whether the aircraft is on land, ascending, descending, or at a constant altitude.
- Use the aircraft ID as the identifier if you are interested in seeing where each plane has traveled.
- Use the aircraft ID and the flight ID field as the identifier if you are interested in comparing distinct routes.
- Use the aircraft id and the time boundary of 1 year, if you want to examine the flights for each aircraft for a year at a time.
- Use the pilot name, aircraft ID, and start time if you want to look at each pilots' flight.
- Use the aircraft ID as the identifier, and split on distances greater than 1000 kilometers to determine new tracks, given that a 1,000-kilometer jump in measurements should not belong to the same track.
- Use the aircraft ID field as the identifier and split using an expression when the value in the flight_manuever field changes. For example, var manuever = TrackFieldWindow("maneuver", -1, 1); maneuver[0] != maneuver[1] checks whether the current value in a track and the previous value match. If not, the track is split.
Output tracks will return the fields used as track identifiers, the count of features within a track (count), the start and end time of each track (start_datetime and end_datetime), the duration of the track in milliseconds (duration) and any other optional statistics.
If Use current map extent is checked, only the features that are visible within the current map extent will be analyzed. If it's not checked, all input features in the input layer will be analyzed, even if they are outside the current map extent.
Limitations
Inputs must be point or area layers with time enabled features of type instant. Any features that do not have time will not be included in the output tracks.
How Reconstruct Tracks works
The sections below describe the functionality of the Reconstruct Tracks tool.
Equations
Variance is calculated using the following equation:
Standard deviation is calculated as the square root of the variance.
Calculations
Input layers are summarized into tracks using a unique identifier. The summary results are calculated within each track.
Each track can optionally apply numeric statistics (Count,Sum, Minimum, Maximum, Range, Mean, Standard Deviation, Variance, First, and Last) or string statistics (Count,Any,First, and Last) for the features summarized within a track.
The First and Last statistics return the first or last value in a track. For example, with a time-ordered track with the following values:[Toronto,Guelph,Montreal], the First value is Toronto, and the Last value is Montreal. First and Last statistics are available at 10.8.1.
The count statistic (for strings and numeric fields) counts the number of nonnull values. The count of the following values equals 5: [0, 1, 10, 5, null, 6] = 5. The count of this set of values equals 3: [Primary, Primary, Secondary, null] = 3.
ArcGIS API for Python example
The Reconstruct Tracks tool is available through ArcGIS API for Python.
This example reconstructs hurricane tracks.
# Import the required ArcGIS API for Python modules
import arcgis
from arcgis.gis import GIS
from arcgis.geoanalytics import summarize_data
# Connect to your ArcGIS Enterprise portal and confirm that GeoAnalytics is supported
portal = GIS("https://myportal.domain.com/portal", "gis_publisher", "my_password", verify_cert=False)
if not portal.geoanalytics.is_supported():
print("Quitting, GeoAnalytics is not supported")
exit(1)
# Find the big data file share dataset you'll use for analysis
search_result = portal.content.search("", "Big Data File Share")
# Look through the search results for a big data file share with the matching name
bdfs_search = next(x for x in search_result if x.title == "bigDataFileShares_NaturalDisasters")
# Look through the big data file share for hurricanes
hurricanes = next(x for x in bdfs_search.layers if x.properties.name == "Hurricanes")
# Set the tool environment settings
arcgis.env.verbose = True
# Reconstruct the hurricane tracks by their serial number
track_result = summarize_data.reconstruct_tracks(input_layer = hurricanes,
track_fields = "serial_num",
method = 'Geodesic',
output_name = "hurricane_tracks")
# Visualize the tool results if you are running Python in a Jupyter Notebook
processed_map = portal.map('World')
processed_map.add_layer(track_result)
processed_map
Similar tools
Use Reconstruct Tracks to summarize features within a track. Other tools may be useful in solving similar but slightly different problems.
Map Viewer Classic analysis tools
If you are trying to summarize points, lines, or areas using different spatial relationships, use the Join Features tool.
ArcGIS Desktop analysis tools
The Reconstruct Tracks tool is also available in ArcGIS Pro.
To run the tool from ArcGIS Pro, your project's active portal must be running ArcGIS Enterprise 10.5 or later. At 10.5, you must sign in to the portal using an account with privileges to perform spatial analysis in the portal.