{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_49:}{:3_49:}{:3_49:}{:3_49:}{:3_49:}
{:3_48:}好地方~刷体力{:3_59:}
{:3_49:}{:3_49:}{:3_49:}{:3_49:}
Becauseof the difficultyof finding
real-world distance data, we invoke the “Manhattan assumption”:
There are enough streets and sidewalks in a sufficiently grid-like pattern
that movements along real-world movement routes is the same as
“straight-line” movement in a space discretized into city blocks [Rossmo
1999]. Kent demonstrated that across several types of serial crime,
the Euclidean and Manhattan distances are essentially interchangeable
in predicting anchor points.