Abstract

With the Covid-19 pandemic, an urgent need has arisen to simulate social distancing. The Optimal Steps Model (OSM) is a pedestrian locomotion model that operationalizes an individual's need for personal space. We present new parameter values for personal space in the OSM to simulate social distancing in the pedestrian dynamics simulator Vadere. Our approach is pragmatic. We consider two use cases: in the first, we demand that a set social distance must never be violated. In the second the social distance can be violated temporarily for less than 10s. For each use case we conduct simulation studies in a typical bottleneck scenario and measure contact times, that is, violations of the social distance rule.We conduct regression analysis to assess how the parameter choice depends on the desired social distance and the corridor width. We find that evacuation time increases linearly with the width of the repulsion potential, which is an analogy to physics modeling the strength of the need for personal space. The evacuation time decreases linearly with larger corridor width. The influence of the corridor width on the evacuation time is smaller than the influence of the range of the repulsion, that is, the need for personal space. If the repulsion is too strong, we observe clogging effects. Our regression formulas enable Vadere users to conduct their own studies without understanding the intricacies of the OSM implementation and without extensive parameter adjustment.

Highlights

  • In 2020, distance rules were imposed in many countries to slow down the spread of the coronavirus

  • The aim is to find out which parameter values have to be chosen to achieve use cases 1 and 2 for a given social distance and how this is related to the evacuation time

  • We find that both use cases can be covered by adjusting the personal space width while fixing the personal space height at h = 850, see App

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Summary

Introduction

In 2020, distance rules were imposed in many countries to slow down the spread of the coronavirus. Ren et al [5] assess the evacuation time of elderly people through a bottleneck from a laboratory experiment. They find that the total evacuation time depends piecewise linearly on the exit width. Zhang et al [6] conduct an egress experiment with mice They find that the total evacuation time decreases with the increase of the exit width in a certain range. They find that the mean flow rate shows a nonlinear dependency on the exit width

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