High-statistics pedestrian dynamics on stairways and their probabilistic fundamental diagrams
Caspar A.S. Pouw, Alessandro Corbetta, Alessandro Gabbana, Chiel van, der Laan, Federico Toschi

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive probabilistic analysis of pedestrian flow on stairways, revealing how crowd density influences individual behavior and velocity, with implications for facility design and crowd management.
Contribution
It introduces a novel high-statistics dataset and a probabilistic framework for understanding pedestrian dynamics on staircases, including velocity distributions and crowd compressibility effects.
Findings
Pedestrians accept fewer than available space, indicating compressibility.
At higher densities, pedestrians maintain a minimum distance of 0.6 m.
Velocity distributions are bimodal, with significant differences between average and mode velocities.
Abstract
Staircases play an essential role in crowd dynamics, allowing pedestrians to flow across large multi-level public facilities such as transportation hubs, and office buildings. Achieving a robust understanding of pedestrian behavior in these facilities is a key societal necessity. What makes this an outstanding scientific challenge is the extreme randomness intrinsic to pedestrian behavior. Any quantitative understanding necessarily needs to be probabilistic, including average dynamics and fluctuations. In this work, we analyze data from an unprecedentedly high statistics year-long pedestrian tracking campaign, in which we anonymously collected millions of trajectories across a staircase within Eindhoven train station (NL). Made possible thanks to a state-of-the-art, faster than real-time, computer vision approach hinged on 3D depth imaging, and YOLOv7-based depth localization. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvacuation and Crowd Dynamics · Traffic and Road Safety · Traffic Prediction and Management Techniques
