Data-Driven Optimization of Public Transit Schedule
Basak, Sanchita, Sun, Fangzhou, Sengupta, Saptarshi, Dubey, Abhishek
Bus transit systems are the backbone of public transportation in the United States. An important indicator of the quality of service in such infrastructures is on-time performance at stops, with published transit schedules playing an integral role governing the level of success of the service. However there are relatively few optimization architectures leveraging stochastic search that focus on optimizing bus timetables with the objective of maximizing probability of bus arrivals at timepoints with delays within desired on-time ranges. In addition to this, there is a lack of substantial research considering monthly and seasonal variations of delay patterns integrated with such optimization strategies. To address these, this paper makes the following contributions to the corpus of studies on transit on-time performance optimization: (a) an unsupervised clustering mechanism is presented which groups months with similar seasonal delay patterns, (b) the problem is formulated as a single-objective optimization task and a greedy algorithm, a genetic algorithm (GA) as well as a particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm are employed to solve it, (c) a detailed discussion on empirical results comparing the algorithms are provided and sensitivity analysis on hyper-parameters of the heuristics are presented along with execution times, which will help practitioners looking at similar problems. The analyses conducted are insightful in the local context of improving public transit scheduling in the Nashville metro region as well as informative from a global perspective as an elaborate case study which builds upon the growing corpus of empirical studies using nature-inspired approaches to transit schedule optimization. Keywords: timetable optimization · genetic algorithm · particle swarm optimization · sensitivity analysis · scheduling 1 Introduction Bus systems are the backbone of public transportation in the US, carrying over 47% of all public passenger trips and 19,380 million passenger miles in the US [18] . For the majority of cities in the US which do not have enough urban forms or budget to build expensive transit infrastructures like subways, the reliance is on buses as the most important transit system since bus systems have advantages arXiv:1912.02574v1
Nov-29-2019
- Country:
- North America > United States
- District of Columbia > Washington (0.04)
- Tennessee > Davidson County
- Nashville (0.04)
- Massachusetts > Suffolk County
- Boston (0.04)
- Asia > China
- Hong Kong (0.04)
- North America > United States
- Genre:
- Research Report (1.00)
- Industry:
- Transportation
- Infrastructure & Services (1.00)
- Ground > Road (1.00)
- Transportation
- Technology: