Abstract

Protest demonstrations are a manifestation of fundamental rights. Authorities are responsible for guiding protesters safely along predefined routes, typically set in an urban built environment. Microscopic crowd simulations support decision-makers in finding sustainable crowd management strategies. Planning routes usually requires knowledge about the length of the demonstration march. This case study quantifies the impact of two uncertain parameters, the number of protesters and the standard deviation of their free-flow speeds, on the length of a protest march through Kaiserslautern, Germany. Over 1000 participants walking through more than 100,000 m2 lead to a computationally demanding model that cannot be analyzed with a standard Monte Carlo ansatz. We select and apply analysis methods that are efficient for large topographies. This combination constitutes the main novelty of this paper: We compute Sobol’ indices with two different methods, based on polynomial chaos expansions, for a down-scaled version of the original set-up and compare them to Monte Carlo computations. We employ the more accurate of the approaches for the full-scale scenario. The global sensitivity analysis reveals a shift in the governing parameter from the number of protesters to the standard deviation of their free-flow speeds over time, stressing the benefits of a time-dependent analysis. We discuss typical actions, for example floats that reduce the variation of the free-flow speed, and their effectiveness in view of the findings.

Highlights

  • Protesters at demonstrations express their fundamental rights like freedom of speech [1].As such, they are vital for democratic societies

  • To stay close to application, we investigate an event with several hundreds to over a thousand participants in a set-up inspired by real demonstrations that took place in Kaiserslautern, Germany

  • We use the selection scenario to identify an appropriate configuration of the polynomial chaos expansion for the subsequent case study of the demonstration scenario

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Summary

Introduction

Protesters at demonstrations express their fundamental rights like freedom of speech [1]. As such, they are vital for democratic societies. Authorities, organizations with security tasks, and event organizers are responsible for mitigating risks and for safely guiding protesters. This necessitates the right crowd management strategies.

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