TY - JOUR
T1 - On the modeling of passenger mobility for stochastic bi-modal urban corridors
AU - Dakic, Igor
AU - Ambühl, Lukas
AU - Schümperlin, Oliver
AU - Menendez, Monica
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) under the project name DIPLOMAT, contract 205121_165644, and the ETH Research Grant ETH-27 16-1 under the project name SPEED. We wish to thank Prof. Ludovic Leclercq from the University of Lyon (IFSTTAR/ENTPE) and Prof. Nikolas Geroliminis from EPF Lausanne for their valuable comments on variational theory and other aspects of this research. We also wish to acknowledge the support of Gian Dönier from the City of Zurich and VBZ for giving us the data. Last, we want to thank Allister Loder for his help with the data; and Kaidi Yang, Mireia Roca-Riu, and Felix Becker for their constructive comments on the proposed methodology.
Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) under the project name DIPLOMAT, contract 205121_165644 , and the ETH Research Grant ETH-27 16-1 under the project name SPEED. We wish to thank Prof. Ludovic Leclercq from the University of Lyon (IFSTTAR/ENTPE) and Prof. Nikolas Geroliminis from EPF Lausanne for their valuable comments on variational theory and other aspects of this research. We also wish to acknowledge the support of Gian Dönier from the City of Zurich and VBZ for giving us the data. Last, we want to thank Allister Loder for his help with the data; and Kaidi Yang, Mireia Roca-Riu, and Felix Becker for their constructive comments on the proposed methodology.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/4
Y1 - 2020/4
N2 - This paper proposes a methodology to estimate the passenger macroscopic fundamental diagram for bi-modal urban corridors while accounting for the stochastic nature of bus operations. The proposed framework extends the existing variational theory (VT) approaches by: (i) introducing a probabilistic VT graph, where the costs are computed using an efficient stochastic shortest path algorithm; (ii) capturing the effects of stochastic moving bus bottlenecks and the correlation of bus arrival times; (iii) incorporating a macroscopic passenger model that reflects the passenger dynamics for the different modes; and (iv) accounting for the effects that the traffic conditions might have on bus operations. Using a Monte-Carlo simulation and empirical data from a bi-modal corridor in Zurich, Switzerland, we not only successfully validate the results yielded by our stochastic VT approach, but also show its applicability on a real corridor. A comparison with a deterministic VT approach reveals the value of the proposed framework, especially for corridors with a high bus frequency and considerable stochasticity. The results demonstrate that incorporating stochasticity and the traffic conditions is essential if buses run with relatively short and variable headways. Moreover, we introduce an innovative application example for the evaluation of different bus lane layouts, aiming to maximize the passenger throughput along a bi-modal urban corridor. The application example shows that the proposed framework can be used as an efficient modeling tool for practitioners. In particular, it can be used to identify a proper lane allocation strategy by computing the critical density of cars when a mixed lane should be switched to a dedicated bus lane or vice versa. It is important to note that such application would not have been possible without our proposed VT extensions, which account for both passenger dynamics and the impact of traffic conditions. Finally, given that the proposed methodology is generic, it can be easily extended to various traffic problems involving stochasticity.
AB - This paper proposes a methodology to estimate the passenger macroscopic fundamental diagram for bi-modal urban corridors while accounting for the stochastic nature of bus operations. The proposed framework extends the existing variational theory (VT) approaches by: (i) introducing a probabilistic VT graph, where the costs are computed using an efficient stochastic shortest path algorithm; (ii) capturing the effects of stochastic moving bus bottlenecks and the correlation of bus arrival times; (iii) incorporating a macroscopic passenger model that reflects the passenger dynamics for the different modes; and (iv) accounting for the effects that the traffic conditions might have on bus operations. Using a Monte-Carlo simulation and empirical data from a bi-modal corridor in Zurich, Switzerland, we not only successfully validate the results yielded by our stochastic VT approach, but also show its applicability on a real corridor. A comparison with a deterministic VT approach reveals the value of the proposed framework, especially for corridors with a high bus frequency and considerable stochasticity. The results demonstrate that incorporating stochasticity and the traffic conditions is essential if buses run with relatively short and variable headways. Moreover, we introduce an innovative application example for the evaluation of different bus lane layouts, aiming to maximize the passenger throughput along a bi-modal urban corridor. The application example shows that the proposed framework can be used as an efficient modeling tool for practitioners. In particular, it can be used to identify a proper lane allocation strategy by computing the critical density of cars when a mixed lane should be switched to a dedicated bus lane or vice versa. It is important to note that such application would not have been possible without our proposed VT extensions, which account for both passenger dynamics and the impact of traffic conditions. Finally, given that the proposed methodology is generic, it can be easily extended to various traffic problems involving stochasticity.
KW - Correlation of bus arrival times
KW - Macroscopic Fundamental Diagram (MFD)
KW - Moving bus bottlenecks
KW - Passenger dynamics
KW - Stochastic bus operations
KW - Stochastic shortest path
KW - Variational theory (VT)
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U2 - 10.1016/j.trc.2019.05.018
DO - 10.1016/j.trc.2019.05.018
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85067977507
SN - 0968-090X
VL - 113
SP - 146
EP - 163
JO - Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies
JF - Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies
ER -