Metrics for Quantifying Shareability in Transportation Networks: The Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem
Navjyoth Sarma JS, Michael F Hyland

TL;DR
This paper introduces metrics to measure trip shareability in transportation networks by formulating the Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem (MNFLOP), which optimizes trip path assignments to maximize shared network usage.
Contribution
It proposes a novel network-level optimization problem (MNFLOP) and develops shareability metrics that quantify trip overlap and demand dispersion in urban transportation networks.
Findings
MNFLOP increases flow overlaps compared to shortest path routing.
Shareability metrics effectively differentiate between demand scenarios.
MNFLOP quantifies demand dispersion and directionality.
Abstract
Cities around the world vary in terms of their transportation networks and travel demand patterns; these variations affect the viability of shared mobility services. This study proposes metrics to quantify the shareability of person-trips in a city, as a function of two inputs--the road 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 trips sharing the links along the original person's path. The study extends this concept to the network level and formulates the Maximum Network Flow Overlap Problem (MNFLOP) to assign all OD trips to paths that maximize network-wide flow overlap. The study utilizes the MNFLOP output to calculate metrics of shareability at various levels of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTransportation Planning and Optimization · Urban Transport and Accessibility · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
