Preprint Journal Article

Metrics for Quantifying Shareability in Transportation Networks: The Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem

Publication Date

July 1, 2022

Abstract

Cities around the world vary in terms of their urban forms, transportation networks, and travel demand patterns; these variations affect opportunities for travelers to share trips, and the viability of shared mobility services. This study proposes metrics to quantify the maximum shareability of person-trips in a city, or region of a city, as a function of two inputs—the transportation network structure and origin-destination (OD) travel demand. The study first conceptualizes a fundamental shareability unit, ‘flow overlap’. Flow overlap denotes, for a person-trip traversing a given path, the weighted (by link distance) average number of other person-trips sharing the links along the original person-trip’s path. The study extends this concept to the network level and formulates the Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem (MNFLOP) to assign all OD person-trips to network paths that maximize flow overlap in the whole network. The study also proposes an MNFLOP variant with a second objective function term, detour distance, to capture the trade-off between minimizing travel distance and maximizing shareability. The study utilizes the MNFLOP output to calculate metrics of shareability at various levels of aggregation: person-trip level, OD level, origin or destination level, network level, and link level. The study applies the MNFLOP and associated shareability metrics to different OD demand scenarios in the Sioux Falls network. The computational results verify that (i) MNFLOP assigns person-trips to paths such that flow overlaps significantly increase relative to shortest path assignment, (ii) MNFLOP and its associated shareability metrics can meaningfully differentiate between different OD trip matrices in terms of maximum shareability, and (iii) an MNFLOP-based metric can quantify demand dispersion—a metric of the directionality of demand—in addition to the magnitude of demand, for trips originating or terminating from a single node/location in the network. The paper also includes an extensive discussion of potential future uses of the MNFLOP and its associated shareability metrics.

Suggested Citation
Navjyoth Sarma and Michael Hyland (2022) “Metrics for Quantifying Shareability in Transportation Networks: The Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem”. Rochester, NY: SSRN. Available at: 10.2139/ssrn.4145450.

policy brief

Public Transportation, Transportation Network Companies (TNCs), and Active Modes

Suggested Citation
Jean-Daniel Saphores (2022) Public Transportation, Transportation Network Companies (TNCs), and Active Modes. Policy Brief. ITS-Irvine. Available at: https://metrans.org/assets/research/psr-19-34_saphores_research-brief.pdf.

published journal article

Stochastic dynamic itinerary interception refueling location problem with queue delay for electric taxi charging stations

Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies

Suggested Citation
Jaeyoung Jung, Joseph Y.J. Chow, R. Jayakrishnan and Ji Young Park (2014) “Stochastic dynamic itinerary interception refueling location problem with queue delay for electric taxi charging stations”, Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies, 40, pp. 123–142. Available at: 10.1016/j.trc.2014.01.008.

research report

Simulation evaluation of green driving strategies based on inter-vehicle communications

Publication Date

August 1, 2010

Abstract

This paper examines two green driving strategies based on inter-vehicle communication (IVC) aimed at reducing tailpipe emissions. Excessive speed and stop-and-go traffic significantly increase fuel consumption and vehicle emissions. It is anticipated that IVC, including vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communications, will be available in the future to relay time-critical and location-based traffic information between vehicles allowing people to drive more smoothly and safely, which also affects fuel use. In this paper the authors study green driving strategies based on IVC and their effects on emission reductions in different traffic conditions. Newellâ??s car-following model and VT-Micro are integrated to establish a simulation platform. With higher market penetration of IVC-equipped vehicles, reduction of emissions and fuel consumption are greater. The greater the delay in communication, the smaller the reduction in emissions and fuel consumption.

Suggested Citation
Hao Yang, Daji Yuan, Wen-Long Jin and Jean-Daniel Saphores (2010) Simulation evaluation of green driving strategies based on inter-vehicle communications. University of California Transportation Center, p. 23p.

published journal article

Airline fuel usage and carbon emissions: Determining factors

Journal of Air Transport Management

Publication Date

July 1, 2017

Author(s)

Jan Brueckner, Chrystyane Abreu
Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner and Chrystyane Abreu (2017) “Airline fuel usage and carbon emissions: Determining factors”, Journal of Air Transport Management, 62, pp. 10–17. Available at: 10.1016/j.jairtraman.2017.01.004.

working paper

Taxi-Based Public Transportation for the Elderly and Handicapped

Publication Date

September 5, 1982

Author(s)

Roger Teal, Richard E. Goodhue, Steve Rooney, Kia Mortazavi

Abstract

This paper analyzes the system organization, performance, and taxi firm impacts of California’s taxi-based elderly and handicapped (E&H) systems, and compares the results to taxi-based general public demand-responsive transit (DRT) systems. The data were gathered from 48 California taxi-based E&H systems. Shared-ride operation is the key to superior system performance, provides the most favorable taxi firm financial impacts and initiates the firm into the paratransit diversification process. In situations with low demand densities, where the sponsor faces a severe total system cost constraint, organizing an ERT system is probably the only feasible strategy. Taxi-based ERT systems are about 25 percent more expensive than taxi-based general public DRT systems, have less impact on firm revenues, and do little to enhance firm evolution.

Suggested Citation
Roger F. Teal, Richard E. Goodhue, Steven B. Rooney and Kia Mortazavi (1982) Taxi-Based Public Transportation for the Elderly and Handicapped. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-82-2. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2rh2h1zx.

Phd Dissertation

Quantifying Sharing Potential in Transportation Networks and the Benefits of Mobility-on-Demand Services with Virtual Stops

Publication Date

January 1, 2023

Author(s)

Abstract

Cities around the world vary in terms of their transportation network structure and travel demand patterns, with implications for the viability of shared mobility services. Recently, the urban mobility sector has witnessed a significant transformation with the introduction of several new types of Mobility-on-Demand (MOD) services that vary in terms of their capacity and flexibility of routes, schedules, and user Pickup and Dropoff (PUDO) locations. This dissertation proposes models and algorithms to analyze sharing in transportation networks and Mobility-on-Demand (MOD) services in two comprehensive studies.

The first study aims to quantify the sharing potential of travelers within a city or region’s transportation network. The second study aims to measure trade-offs in user and operator costs when MOD services operate with Virtual Stops which refer to flexible PUDO locations requiring travelers to walk the first/last mile of their trip.The first study addresses the lack of metrics that jointly characterize a region’s travel demand patterns and its transportation network in terms of the potential for travelers to share trips. I define sharing potential in the form of person-trip shareability and introduce and conceptualize ‘flow overlap’ as the fundamental metric to capture shareability. The study formulates the Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem (MNFLOP), a math program that assigns person-trips to network paths that maximize network-wide flow overlap. The results reveal that the shareability metrics can (i) meaningfully differentiate between different Origin-Destination trip matrices in terms of flow overlap, and (ii) quantify demand dispersion of trips from a single location considering the underlying road network. Finally, I validate MNFLOP’s ability to quantify shareability by showing that demand patterns with higher flow overlap are strongly associated with lower mileage routes for a last-mile microtransit service.

The second study proposes a scalable algorithm for operating shared-ride MOD services with flexible and dynamic PUDO locations—called C2C (Corner-to-Corner) services—in a congestible network. I compare four MOD service types: Door-to-Door (D2D) Ride-hailing, D2D Ride-pooling, C2C Ride-hailing, and C2C Ride-pooling by evaluating operator and user costs. The results show that Ride-pooling reduces operator costs while slightly increasing user costs, whereas C2C reduces operator costs but significantly increases user costs. Combining Ride-pooling and C2C appears promising to reduce operator costs and to reduce vehicles miles traveled (VMT) in MOD systems.

Suggested Citation
Navjyoth J. S. Shobha (2023) Quantifying Sharing Potential in Transportation Networks and the Benefits of Mobility-on-Demand Services with Virtual Stops. Ph.D.. UC Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/u4evf/cdi_cdl_escholarship_oai_escholarship_org_ark_13030_qt7sn3k34z (Accessed: October 12, 2023).

published journal article

A Knowledge-Based Decision Support Architecture for Advanced Traffic Management

Transportation Research Part A: General

Publication Date

January 1, 1990

Author(s)

Suggested Citation
Stephen G. Ritchie (1990) “A Knowledge-Based Decision Support Architecture for Advanced Traffic Management”, Transportation Research Part A: General, 24(1), pp. 27–37. Available at: 10.1016/0191-2607(90)90068-h.

book/book chapter

Security challenges of networked control systems

Publication Date

January 1, 2018

Author(s)

Arman Sargolzaei, Alireza Abbaspour, Mohammad Al Faruque, Anas Salah Eddin, Kang Yen
Suggested Citation
Arman Sargolzaei, Alireza Abbaspour, Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque, Anas Salah Eddin and Kang Yen (2018) “Security challenges of networked control systems”, in . Amini, MH and Boroojeni, KG and Iyengar, SS and Pardalos, PM and Blaabjerg, F and Madni, AM (ed.) Studies in systems, decision and control. Springer International Publishing (Studies in systems decision and control), pp. 77–95. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-74412-4_6.

conference paper

Security and privacy challenges in IoT-based machine-to-machine collaborative scenarios

Proceedings of the eleventh IEEE/ACM/IFIP international conference on Hardware/Software codesign and system synthesis - CODES '16

Publication Date

January 1, 2016

Author(s)

Hsin Chung Chen, Mohammad Al Faruque, Pai H. Chou
Suggested Citation
Hsin Chung Chen, Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque and Pai H. Chou (2016) “Security and privacy challenges in IoT-based machine-to-machine collaborative scenarios”, in Proceedings of the eleventh IEEE/ACM/IFIP international conference on Hardware/Software codesign and system synthesis - CODES '16. ACM Press. Available at: 10.1145/2968456.2974008.