4,873 research outputs found
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Real-Time Information and Correlations for Optimal Routing in Stochastic Networks
Congestion is a world-wide problem in transportation. One major reason is random interruptions. The traffic network is inherently stochastic, and strong dependencies exist among traffic quantities, e.g., travel time, traffic speed, link volume. Information in stochastic networks can help with adaptive routing in terms of minimizing expected travel time or disutility. Routing in such networks is different from that in deterministic networks or when stochastic dependencies are not taken into account. This dissertation addresses the optimal routing problems, including the optimal a priori path problem and the optimal adaptive routing problem with different information scenarios, in stochastic and time-dependent networks with explicit consideration of the correlations between link travel time random variables. There are a number of studies in the literature addressing the optimal routing problems, but most of them ignore the correlations between link travel times. The consideration of the correlations makes the problem studied in this dissertation difficult, both conceptually and computationally. The optimal path finding problem in such networks is different from that in stochastic and time-dependent networks with no consideration of the correlations. This dissertation firstly provides an empirical study of the correlations between random link travel times and also verifies the importance of the consideration of the spatial and temporal correlations in estimating trip travel time and its reliability. It then shows that Bellman\u27s principle of optimality or non-dominance is not valid due to the time-dependency and the correlations. A new property termed purity is introduced and an exact label-correcting algorithm is designed to solve the problem. With the fast advance of telecommunication technologies, real-time traffic information will soon become an integral part of travelers\u27 route choice decision making. The study of optimal adaptive routing problems is thus timely and of great value. This dissertation studies the problems with a wide variety of information scenarios, including delayed global information, real-time local information, pre-trip global information, no online information, and trajectory information. It is shown that, for the first four partial information scenarios, Bellman\u27s principle of optimality does not hold. A heuristic algorithm is developed and employed based on a set of necessary conditions for optimality. The same algorithm is showed to be exact for the perfect online information scenario. For optimal adaptive routing problem with trajectory information, this dissertation proves that, if the routing policy is defined in a similar way to other four information scenarios, i.e., the trajectory information is included in the state variable, Bellman\u27s principle of optimality is valid. However, this definition results in a prohibitively large number of the states and the computation can hardly be carried out. The dissertation provides a recursive definition for the trajectory-adaptive routing policy, for which the information is not included in the state variable. In this way, the number of states is small, but Bellman\u27s principle of optimality or non-dominance is invalid for a similar reason as in the optimal path problem. Again purity is introduced to the trajectory-adaptive routing policy and an exact algorithm is designed based on the concept of decreasing order of time
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Value of Traveler Information for Adaptive Routing in Stochastic Time-Dependent Networks
Real-time information plays an important role in travelers’ routing choices in an uncertain network by enabling online adaptation to revealed traffic conditions. The quality of the information affects its effectiveness. Usually there are some limitations in the information provided to the travelers, spatially, temporally or both. In this thesis, three variants of an optimal adaptive routing problem with partial online information problem are introduced: global information with time lag, global pre-trip information and radio information on a subset of links without time lag. A generic description of online information is provided. An algorithm is designed for the optimal routing problem in stochastic time-dependent networks with partial online information and specializations required for each of the three variants are given. A test example is conducted and computationally verifies the non-negative value of information. The work in this thesis is potentially of interest to traveler information systems evaluation and design
Optimisation of Mobile Communication Networks - OMCO NET
The mini conference “Optimisation of Mobile Communication Networks” focuses on advanced methods for search and optimisation applied to wireless communication networks. It is sponsored by Research & Enterprise Fund Southampton Solent University.
The conference strives to widen knowledge on advanced search methods capable of optimisation of wireless communications networks. The aim is to provide a forum for exchange of recent knowledge, new ideas and trends in this progressive and challenging area. The conference will popularise new successful approaches on resolving hard tasks such as minimisation of transmit power, cooperative and optimal routing
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Adaptive Route Choice in Stochastic Time-Dependent Networks: Routing Algorithms and Choice Modeling
Transportation networks are inherently uncertain due to random disruptions; meanwhile, real-time information potentially helps travelers adapt to realized traffic conditions and make better route choices under such disruptions. Modeling adaptive route choice behavior is essential in evaluating Advanced Traveler Information Systems (ATIS) and related policies to better provide travelers with real-time information. This dissertation contributes to the state of the art by estimating the first latent-class routing policy choice model using revealed preference (RP) data and providing efficient computer algorithms for routing policy choice set generation. A routing policy is defined as a decision rule applied at each link that maps possible realized traffic conditions to decisions on the link to take next. It represents a traveler\u27s ability to look ahead in order to incorporate real-time information not yet available at the time of decision.
A case study is conducted in Stockholm, Sweden and data for the stochastic time-dependent network are generated from hired taxi Global Positioning System (GPS) traces through the methods of map-matching and non-parametric link travel time estimation. A latent-class Policy Size Logit model is specified with two additional layers of latency in the measurement equation. The two latent classes of travelers are policy users who follow routing policies and path users who follow fixed paths. For the measurement equation of the policy user class, the choice of a routing policy is latent and only its realized path on a given day can be observed. Furthermore, when GPS traces have relatively long gaps between consecutive readings, the realized path cannot be uniquely identified.
Routing policy choice set generation is based on the generalization of path choice set generation methods, and utilizes efficient implementation of an optimal routing policy (ORP) algorithm based on the two-queue data structure for label correcting. Systematic evaluation of the algorithm in random networks as well as in two large scale real-life networks is conducted. The generated choice sets are evaluated based on coverage and adaptiveness. Coverage is the percentage of observed trips included in the generated choice sets based on a certain threshold of overlapping between observed and generated routes, and adaptiveness represents the capability of a routing policy to be realized as different paths over different days. It is shown that using a combination of methods yields satisfactory coverage of 91.2%. Outlier analyses are then carried out for unmatching trips in choice set generation. The coverage achieves 95% for 100% threshold after correcting GPS errors and breaking up trips with intermediate stops, and further achieves 100% for 90% threshold.
The latent-class routing policy choice model is estimated against observed GPS traces based on the three different sample sizes resulting from coverage improvement, and the estimates appear consistent across different sample sizes. Estimation results show the policy user class probability increases with trip length, and the latent-class routing policy choice model fits the data better than a single-class path choice model or routing policy choice model. This suggests that travelers are heterogeneous in terms of their ability and willingness to plan ahead and utilize real-time information. Therefore, a fixed path model as commonly used in the literature may lose explanatory power due to its simplified assumptions on network stochasticity and travelers\u27 utilization of real-time information
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