Abstract

Airport security checkpoints are the most important bottleneck in airport operations, but few studies aim to empirically understand them better. In this work we address this lack of data-driven quantitative analysis and insights about the security checkpoint process. To this end, we followed a total of 2277 passengers through the security checkpoint process at Rotterdam The Hague Airport (RTM), and published detailed timing data about their journey through the process. This dataset is unique in scientific literature, and can aid future researchers in the modelling and analysis of the security checkpoint. Our analysis showed important differences between six identified passenger types. Business passengers were found to be the fastest group, while passengers with reduced mobility (PRM) and families were the slowest two groups. We also identified events that hindered the performance of the security checkpoint, in which groups of passengers had to wait long for security employees or other passengers. A total of 335 such events occurred, with an average of 2.3 passengers affected per event. It was found that a passenger that had a high luggage drop time was followed by an event in 27% of the cases, which was the most frequent cause. To mitigate this waiting time of subsequent passengers in the security checkpoint process, we performed an experiment with a so-called service lane. This lane was used to process passengers that are expected to be slow, while the remaining lanes processed the other passengers. It was found that the mean throughput of the service lane setups was higher than the average throughput of the standard lanes, making it a promising setup to investigate further.

Highlights

  • After the devastating September 11 attacks, airport security has changed considerably

  • In this work we address this lack of data-driven quantitative analysis and insights about the security checkpoint process

  • We followed a total of 2277 passengers through the security checkpoint process at Rotterdam The Hague Airport (RTM), and noted detailed timing data about their journey through the process

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Summary

Introduction

After the devastating September 11 attacks, airport security has changed considerably. Kirschenbaum reports some higher-level quantitative data related to the security checkpoint process, but it lacks specific details that allow researchers to find improvements for the security checkpoint. In this work we address this lack of data-driven quantitative analysis and insights about the security checkpoint process To this end, we followed a total of 2277 passengers through the security checkpoint process at Rotterdam The Hague Airport (RTM), and noted detailed timing data about their journey through the process. The dataset as discussed in this work is unique in literature due to its high level of detail, and our analysis of this dataset provides novel insights in the security checkpoint process While gathering this data, we observed that slow passengers have a negative effect on the waiting time of subsequent passengers in the security checkpoint process.

Data Overview
Security Checkpoint Analysis
Passenger Types
Delay Propagation
Service Lane Experiment
Passenger Processing
Lane Throughput
Service Lane Setup Performance
Limitations and Future
Findings
Discussion & Conclusions
Full Text
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