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A simulation model for developing the trip length frequency distributionPan, Chung-Chun January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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Mathematical models for commuter traffic in cities / by Tony K. Tan.Tan, Tony Keng Yam, 1940- January 1967 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references. / 116 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Mathematics, 1968
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An experimental analysis of two-fluid traffic model parameter sensitivityMalakhoff, Lev A. January 1986 (has links)
The Two-Fluid traffic model is a tool used to measure the quality of service in city traffic networks. The model has been calibrated for the central business district of Roanoke, Virginia and the results have been compared to those from various other cities around the world.
In addition, the sensitivity of the Two-Fluid model parameters has been studied for different unit trip lengths used in calibration for the Roanoke CBD. The three-unit trip lengths tested were 1-mile, 2-mile, and 3-mile. Statistical analyses led to the conclusion that the model parameters are not significantly different for different trip lengths.
Furthermore, parameter sensitivity was also established for three types of driver behavior, specifically, "aggressive," "normal," and "conservative." The two-fluid trends showed that the two-fluid curve corresponding to the aggressive driver fell below those of the normal and conservative drivers for off-peak traffic conditions but began to approach the normal trend during peak period. On the other hand, the conservative trend continuously maintained higher trip time values for any given stop time, as compared to the other two trends. This implies that aggressive driving behavior can decrease travel times during off-peak conditions, but has little effect during peak periods, where surrounding traffic does not allow excessive speed or lane changing. / M.S.
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The fundamental law of highway congestion: revisited with data from Japan.January 2010 (has links)
Cheung, Kin Tai. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 34-35). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.i / Acknowledgements --- p.iii / Contents --- p.iv / Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 2 --- Literature Review --- p.4 / Chapter 3 --- Data Description --- p.7 / Chapter 4 --- Ordinary Least-Squares and Fixed-Effect Estimations --- p.10 / Chapter 4.1 --- OLS Estimation --- p.10 / Chapter 4.2 --- Fixed-Effect Estimation --- p.13 / Chapter 5 --- Cross-sectional and Fixed-Effect IV Estimations --- p.16 / Chapter 5.1 --- Cross-sectional IV Model --- p.16 / Chapter 5.2 --- Fixed-Effect IV Model --- p.23 / Chapter 6 --- Conclusion --- p.29 / Appendix --- p.30 / Estimation Results for Honshu Island --- p.30 / Ordinary-Least Squares Results in 150 observations regression --- p.33 / References --- p.34
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The economic rationale for stochastic urban transport models and travel behaviour : a mathematical programming approach to quantitative analysis with Perth dataErnst, Wolfgang F. January 2003 (has links)
[Formulae and special characters can only be approximated here. Please see the pdf version of the abstract for an accurate reproduction.] This thesis reviews, extends and applies to urban traffic analysis the entropy concept of Shannon and Luce's mathematical psychology in a fairly complex and mathematically demanding model of human decision making, if it is solved as a deeply nested structure of logit calculus. Recognising consumers' different preferences and the universal propensity to seek the best choice when going to some desired goal (k), a transparent mathematical program (MP) is developed: the equivalent of a nested multinomial logit model without its inherent computational difficulty. The MP model makes a statistical assessment of individual decisions based on a randomised (measurable) utility within a given choice structure: some path through a diagram (Rk, Dk), designed a priori, of a finite number of sequential choices. The Equivalence Theorem (ET) formalises the process and states a non-linear MP with linear constraints that maximises collective satisfaction: utility plus weighted entropy, where the weight (1/θn) is a behavioural parameter to be calibrated in each case, eg for the Perth CBD. An optimisation subject to feasible routes through the (Rk, Dk) network thus captures the rational behaviour of consumers on their individually different best-choice decision paths towards their respective goals (k). This theory has been applied to urban traffic assignment before: a Stochastic User Equi-librium (SUE). What sets this thesis apart is its focus on MP models that can be solved with standard Operations Research software (eg MINOS), models for which the ET is a conditio sine qua non. A brief list of SUE examples in the literature includes Fisk's logit SUE model in (impractically many) route flows. Dial's STOCH algorithm obviates path enumeration, yet is a logit multi-path assignment procedure, not an MP model; it is nei-ther destination oriented nor an optimisation towards a SUE. A revision of Dial's method is provided, named STOCH[k], that computes primal variables (node and link flows) and Lagrangian duals (the satisfaction difference n→k). Sheffi & Powell presented an unconstrained optimisation problem, but favoured a probit SUE, defying closed formulae and standard OR software. Their model corresponds to the (constrained) dual model here, yet the specifics of our primary MP model and its dual are possible only if one restricts himself to logit SUE models, including the ET, which is logit-specific. A real world application needs decomposition, and the Perth CBD example is iteratively solved by Partial Linearisation, switching from (measured) disutility minimisation to Sheffi & Powell's Method of Successive Averages near the optimum. The methodology is demonstrated on the Perth Central Business District (CBD). To that end, parameter Θ is calibrated on Main Roads' traffic count data over the years 1997/98 and 1998/99. The method is a revision of Liu & Fricker's simultaneous estimation of not only Θ but an appropriate trip matrix also. Our method handles the more difficult variable costs (congestion), incomplete data (missing observations) and observation errors (wrong data). Finally, again based on Main Roads' data (a sub-area trip matrix), a Perth CBD traffic assignment is computed, (a) as a logit SUE and - for comparison - (b) as a DUE (using the PARTAN method of Florian, Guélat and Spiess). The results are only superficially similar. In conclusion, the methodology has the potential to replace current DUE models and to deepen transport policy analysis, taking into account individual behaviour and a money-metric utility that quantifies 'social benefits', for instance in a cost-benefit-analysis.
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