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Urban Travel Forecasting: What Was Learned in the Past 50 Years? How Should We Proceed in the Future?

Urban Travel Forecasting: What Was Learned in the Past 50 Years? How Should We Proceed in the Future?. Professor David Boyce Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA Computational Transportation Science Seminar

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Urban Travel Forecasting: What Was Learned in the Past 50 Years? How Should We Proceed in the Future?

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  1. Urban Travel Forecasting:What Was Learned in the Past 50 Years?How Should We Proceed in the Future? Professor David Boyce Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA Computational Transportation Science Seminar University of Illinois at Chicago April 25, 2007

  2. Overview • Origins of urban travel forecasting models in practice and in research; • Model design choices facing the travel forecaster; • History and constraints of travel forecasting software systems; • Prospects for the future.

  3. Origins of travel forecasting models • Travel forecasting, as we know it today, began in the early 1950s: • In practice, to provide a basis for designing post-war freeway systems, as an outgrowth of earlier surveys of urban travel patterns; • In research, as an ingenious idea suggested by a new theory of optimization, in the context of basic research on allocation of scarce resources in a post-war civil defense project. • The former took hold, and was disseminated; the latter was lost for 15 years, and has had little impact on the field, despite its far-sighted implications.

  4. Travel Forecasting Procedure Based on Detroit Study Experience (Carroll and Bevis, Papers of the Regional Science Ass’n, 1957)

  5. The description of the transportation planning process, as found on page 9 of the Final Report of the Chicago Area Transportation Study, Volume I, 1959.

  6. This plan was recommended by the Chicago Area Transportation Study in 1962. The solid red lines were agreed upon before the Study began in 1955. The dashed lines were proposed additions to that system. Only one facility on this map, I-355, was built; an extension is now under construction. The Crosstown Expressway became highly controversial in the early 1970s, although funding was available to build this facility. Those funds were later used for arterial roads and transit lines. This plan was the first and last attempt to utilize optimizing methods to design a plan.

  7. Martin Beckmann’s user-equilibrium travel model with variable demand formulated as a constrained, nonlinear optimization problem1 • Beckmann, M., C. B. McGuire and C. B. Winsten (1956) • Studies in the Economics of Transportation, Yale University Press.

  8. Urban Location and Transportation Systems • Urban activities may be viewed as a spatial system: • land area, floor area and layout requirements of households, firms and public agencies and services • desire for spatial separation, light, clean air and environmental amenities • land availability and suitability for location requirements • Transportation provides connections among activities: • high density activities require higher capacity systems (e.g. rail transit) • low density, extensive activities require lower capacity, more flexible systems (e.g. cars on an arterial network) • Travel times and costs partially determine the relative spacing of activities: • households and workplaces • households and retail firms and services • employment and business services and package delivery

  9. Relation of travel times/costs to spatial interactions: • unit travel costs increasing with network flows (roads) • unit travel costs decreasing with network flows (some transit) • ability of different modes to serve spatially intensive vs. spatially decentralized patterns • Land market and regulations: an imperfect mechanism for coordinating land development, density and thereby travel. • Major cohesive forces that causes large cities to grow: • transportation services • skilled labor supply • agglomeration and localization economies (availability of specialized services at one location) • business and public services (why did Boeing move to Chicago?) • Major forces that cause large cities to disperse: • need to satisfy space requirements at lower cost • desire to move closer to skilled labor force or to employ labor with different attributes (why did Sears move to the outlying suburbs?) • reluctance and lack of incentives to recycle previously used land (reuse of brownfields)

  10. One attempt to represent the relationships among urban activities and transportation modes. PTV America, Inc.

  11. Let’s examine from first principles the attributes of these phenomena, as might be the situation in a place with no prior modeling experience. • Unconstrained by prior research and practice; • Unconstrained by computational requirements; • Unconstrained by theory and data requirements. Note: This may be dangerous! But it may offer us some new insights into the phenomena.

  12. Framework for the design of a travel forecasting model as a three-dimensional matrix of model attributes.

  13. Location of households, employment, urban activities and land use • Locations and land development defined by small areas • Locations and land development defined by land parcel • Locations and land development defined on a small grid • Travel activities • Trips from origins to destinations • Tours, or sequences of trips • Connections between activities (activity-based model) • Traveler classes • Socio-economic classes (households classified by number of persons, number of workers, income, number of cars) • Trip purposes, for trip-based and tour-based models

  14. Clock time • Daily (24 hour) • Period, such as peak-hour (static) • Instantaneous or short interval (dynamic) • Transportation technologies (modes) • Vehicles only • All movements of persons by mode, including walk, cycle • Freight and persons • Networks • Nodes (intersections, zone centroids) • Links (directed connections between two nodes) • Travel time and cost/fare (links or origin to destination)

  15. Frequency of travel • Trips or tours per time period • Departure time • Uniform rate during modeling period • Dependent on desired arrival time, or congested travel time • Dependent upon avoiding congested travel conditions • Origin-destination flow • Demand function for each OD pair (Beckmann’s formulation) • Constrained by total number of departures or arrivals (known as a doubly-constrained gravity model) • Destination choice function determined by variables describing destination, and segmented by classes

  16. Route choice structures and assumptions about perceptions of travel time • Cost minimizing based on perfect information (deterministic user-equilibrium) • Cost minimizing based on perfect information with random perception errors (stochastic user-equilibrium) • Cost minimizing based on stochastic link/intersection travel times with assumption about attitude towards risk • Structure of travel choices (e.g. mode choice) • Simultaneous (all choices decided at once) • Sequential (sequence of choices, each dependent on the previous) • Hierarchical (choices conditional on other information) • Traveler market segmentation • Tour type, designating the trip chain in which an individual trip occurs: work tour, at-work tour, and non-work tour • Chauffeured tours and non-chauffeured tours

  17. Vehicles • Discrete or Packets (individual or groups of vehicles) • Continuous (flows of vehicles) • Scheduled (headways or timetable) • Relation of traffic congestion to flows on network links • Delay depends on each link’s own flow (separable) • Delay depends on each link’s own flow plus traffic controls that depend on other flows • Delay depends directly or indirectly on all flows (non-separable) • Relation of traffic congestion to clock time • Delay depends on current flow only, or on current and future flow • Delay depends on current and future flow, and on unknown incidents • Delay depends on boarding and alighting passengers, and number of persons in vehicle

  18. Attributes of traditional travel forecasting models • Basic primitives • Activity locations defined by traffic analysis zones • Trip-based, origin to destination • Classes defined by trip purposes, with socio-economic segmentation • Daily (24 hour) or Period, such as peak-period • Sometimes vehicular travel only, including trucks • Networks defined by nodes, links with travel time/cost • Basic dimensions: four models solved sequentially/feedback • Trips per time period with implied uniform departure rate • Origin-destination flow constrained by number of departures and arrivals (doubly-constrained gravity model) • Nested logit mode choice model • Cost minimizing route choice (deterministic user-equilibrium) • Basic network characteristics • Continuous flows of vehicles • Delay depends on each link’s own flow (separable) • Delay depends on current flow only

  19. Attributes of integrated travel forecasting models • Basic primitives • Activity locations defined by traffic analysis zones • Trip-based or tour-based, origin to destination • Classes defined by trip purposes, with socio-economic segmentation • Multiple periods, such as peak and shoulder periods • Person and vehicular travel, including trucks • Networks defined by nodes, links with travel time/cost • Basic dimensions: one integrated model of defined choices • Trips per time period, exogenous or endogenous • Origin-destination, mode and time period choices defined as flows and constrained by number of departures and arrivals • Cost minimizing route choice by period (deterministic user-equilibrium) • Solved by an iterative algorithm to precise convergence • Basic network characteristics • Continuous flows of vehicles • Delay depends on each link’s own flow (separable or non-separable) • Delay depends on current flow only

  20. Activity Frequency (Trip Generation) Activity Frequency (Trip Generation) Destination Choice (Trip Distribution) Mode Choice Consistent levels of service with a precise user-equilibrium solution Route Choice (Traffic Assignment) Sequential Procedure Integrated Model Dest Choice / Mode Choice / Period Choice / Route Choice Feedback

  21. Feedback by Averaging of OD Matrices

  22. Problems requiring travel forecastsfor transportation systems planning • Systems or network planning: • Determine system layout or configuration • Determine spacing of facilities by type (e.g., freeway, arterial, collector; rail, bus, shuttle) • Determine overall capacities of facilities (vehicles, persons per hour) • Subsystem or modal planning: • Determine intersection lane capacities, signal system design • Coordinate signal system design • Determine transit frequencies (headways), vehicle size • Coordinate transit services among submodes

  23. Staging of facility and service improvements: • Determine annual and multi-year improvement programs • Find optimal staging of project implementation • Assessment of environmental, energy and social consequences of transportation systems • Determine total emissions (NOx, CO2, SO2) and energy consumption by year, facility type, and subregions • Determine equity and fairness measures (termed environmental justice in USA) • Determine which travel classes, trips, time periods are impacted by a given system improvement

  24. Relationship to Location and Land Use Planning • Extent and scale of transportation systems is determined by location, density and scale of land use pattern and the associated pattern of urban activities; • Effectiveness and efficiency (cost) of alternative transportation technologies (modes) depends on the extent, density and layout (clustering or dispersion) of urban activities; • To be most effective, land use and transportation systems planning must be coordinated and undertaken jointly.

  25. History of travel forecasting software systems • The origins of travel forecasting software may be traced to the first use of main frame computers in this field in 1958; • Software systems called “batteries” were developed by the Federal Government and its consultants in the 1960s; • These were reorganized and extended during the 1970s as the Urban Transportation Planning System (UTPS); • Consultants to the Federal Government and transportation studies also developed software systems, in part with the support of Control Data Corporation, which sought service contracts (TranPlan, and later MinUTP); • During the 1980s new software systems were developed from the findings of academic research based on the PC (EMME/2, TransCAD, SATURN, VISION System); • Since the 1990s, a consolidation of software systems has occurred, resulting in four principal systems (CUBE, EMME, TransCAD, VISION) and a few systems found in selected global regions (ESTRAUS, SATURN, TRACKS, TRANUS).

  26. Constraints imposed by software systems • Nearly all software is based on the traditional sequential procedure view of travel forecasting; • As a result, the capabilities offered are basically toolkits for implementing and solving specific models, and sequences of models, as found in practice; • These capabilities are linked together by menus, scripts and other ad hoc methods; • Only one software vendor offers a specially designed solution procedure based on the integrated model concept (MCT’s ESTRAUS); • General purpose solvers for integrated models, formulated as optimization problems, are not efficient for the large-scale implementations found in this field; micro-simulation remains impractical and may omit important relationships. • Professional practice and training of practitioners is increasingly related to one or more of these software systems, which are often seen as “black boxes” by users.

  27. Prospects for the Future • Need for better informed decisions is increasing (global warming, resource shortages, equity around the world); • Implications of bad decisions are not confined to wasted resources, since system equilibria will adjust to the realities, and the least efficient urban cities will decline (St. Louis, Detroit in the US; Russia, Britain in the world economy); • Opportunities to create more livable and productive urban environments may be lost, if decisions are not improved; • Progress in advancing travel and location models is slow and evolutionary, but capability to apply accumulated knowledge through improving computer hardware and software appears to expand at an increasing rate; • Progress will ultimately depend upon improved training of professionals and researchers, which is relatively slow; • Therefore, investment in education and research is the key to exploiting the technological advances that computer engineering and science is providing to us.

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