Last week, two members of the Platial Lab community – current doctoral candidate Dan Qiang and former PhD student Dr. Hongyu Zhang – attended the Association of Geographic Information Laboratories in Europe (AGILE) 2025 conference in Dresden, Germany.

Dan presented her full paper, Mobility Vitality in Active and Micro-Mobility Modes: Measuring Urban Vitality Through Spatiotemporal Similarity, which contributes to ongoing research into how mobility data can help us understand urban life, particularly through the lens of micromobility and vitality.

Hongyu, now a Faculty Lecturer at UMass Amherst, shared his short paper, Evaluating Spatial Dependency in Regional Similarities of the Population Dynamics Foundation Model, continuing his work at the intersection of spatial modelling and GeoAI.

Both Dan and Hongyu had a great time in Dresden, reconnecting with colleagues, exchanging ideas, and engaging in discussions with fellow spatial data scientists. We are very happy to see Platial Lab research represented on the AGILE stage.