14 research outputs found
An overview of the modeling of crowd dynamics
In this chapter we review some of the most important models at microscopic, macroscopic, and mesoscopic scale, which, in our opinion, represent milestones in their respective fields or are of particular interest for this book. We also report some models for rational pedestrians, which make use of techniques from optimal control theory. For the sake of convenience, we present all models in two space dimensions
Basic theory of measure-based models
This chapter is devoted to the mathematical foundations of the model introduced in Chap.  5. Contents go continuously back and forth between modeling and analysis, however with a more formal approach than that used in the previous chapter. The first three sections, from Sects. 6.1 to 6.3, discuss how the measure-based model can be derived from a particle description of pedestrians, thereby formalizing the link between individualities and collectivity which is at the basis of most of the complexity of crowd behaviors. In addition, in the light of such a derivation they propose a probabilistic reading of the measure-based model, which turns out to be particularly meaningful for applications. The central part of the chapter, encompassing Sects. 6.4–6.7, is concerned with the basic theory of well-posedness and numerical approximation of measure-valued Cauchy problems for first order models based on conservation laws, also in a multiscale perspective. Minimal generic assumptions are stated in order to achieve proofs, to be regarded possibly also as guidelines in the modeling approach. Finally, Sect. 6.8 resumes the discussion about the crowd model presented in Chap.  5 studying under which conditions it is in the scope of the theory set forth in the preceding sections
Multiscale modeling by time-evolving measures
This chapter is devoted to a multiscale approach to the modeling of crowd dynamics, which is the core topic of the book. We begin by presenting, in Sect. 5.1, a general measure-based modeling framework suitable to include the basic features of pedestrian kinematics at any scale. Specifically, we assume that pedestrian motion results from the interplay between the individual will to follow a preferred travel program and the necessity to face the rest of the crowd. We discuss in Sect. 5.2 how to properly model these behavioral aspects. In Sect. 5.3 we show how discrete (microscopic) and continuous (macroscopic) models can be obtained in the proposed framework, before focusing, in Sect. 5.4, on multiscale modeling issues. We also propose a detailed dimensional analysis, which highlights the role of a few significant parameters, and a numerical scheme for the approximate solution of the equations. The scheme is obtained in two steps in Sect. 5.5. First we derive a discrete-in-time model; next we discretize the space variable as well, obtaining an algorithm (cf. Appendix B) which can be implemented on a computer to produce simulations (cf. Chap.  2). Finally, in Sect. 5.6 we extend the previous modeling structures to the case of two interacting crowds
Problems and simulations
In this chapter we give an informal introduction to the multiscale model and present some case studies of interest for applications, along with related numerical simulations. Results presented here are somehow complementary to those usually presented by physicists, engineers, and computer scientists. Indeed, we aim at showing how mathematical modeling can help in developing truthful pedestrian models, and at giving a sample of phenomena which can be simulated without the introduction of artificial or ad hoc effects