Modeling network-wide impacts of traffic bottleneck mitigation strategies under stochastic capacity conditions

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Title Modeling network-wide impacts of traffic bottleneck mitigation strategies under stochastic capacity conditions
Publication Type dissertation
School or College College of Engineering
Department Civil & Environmental Engineering
Author Li, Mingxin
Date 2010-08
Description Traffic congestion occurs because the available capacity cannot serve the desired demand on a portion of the roadway at a particular time. Major sources of congestion include recurring bottlenecks, incidents, work zones, inclement weather, poor signal timing, and day-to-day fluctuations in normal traffic demand. This dissertation addresses a series of critical and challenging issues in evaluating the benefits of Advanced Traveler Information Strategies under different uncertainty modeling approaches are integrated in this dissertation, namely: mathematical programming, dynamic simulation and analytical approximation. The proposed models aim to 1) represent static-state network user equilibrium conditions, knowledge quality and accessibility of traveler information systems under both stochastic capacity and stochastic demand distributions; 2) characterize day-to-day learning behavior with different information groups under stochastic capacity and 3) quantify travel time variability from stochastic capacity distribution functions on critical bottlenecks. First, a nonlinear optimization-based conceptual framework is proposed for incorporating stochastic capacity, stochastic demand, travel time performance functions and varying degrees of traveler knowledge in an advanced traveler information provision environment. This method categorizes commuters into two classes: (1) those with access to perfect traffic information every day, and (2) those with knowledge of the expected traffic conditions across different days. Using a gap function framework, two mathematical programming models are further formulated to describe the route choice behavior of the perfect information and expected travel time user classes under stochastic day-dependent travel time. This dissertation also presents adaptive day-to-day traveler learning and route choice behavioral models under the travel time variability. To account for different levels of information availability and cognitive limitations of individual travelers, a set of "bounded rationality" rules are adapted to describe route choice rules for a traffic system with inherent process noise and different information provision strategies. In addition, this dissertation investigates a fundamental problem of quantifying travel time variability from its root sources: stochastic capacity and demand variations that follow commonly used log-normal distributions. The proposed models provide theoretically rigorous and practically usefully tools to understand the causes of travel time unreliability and evaluate the system-wide benefit of reducing demand and capacity variability.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Route choice behavior; Static traffic assignment; Stochastic road capacity; Value of traveler information
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Doctor of Philosophy
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Mingxin Li 2010
Format application/pdf
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 3,008,901 bytes
Source Original housed in Marriott Library Special Collections, QA3.5 2011 .L5
ARK ark:/87278/s68d09zd
Setname ir_etd
ID 194446
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s68d09zd
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