Abstract

All existing day-to-day dynamics of departure time choice at a single bottleneck are unstable, and this has led to doubt over the existence of a stable user equilibrium in the real world. However, empirical observations and our personal driving experience suggest stable stationary congestion patterns during a peak period. In this paper, we attempt to reconcile the discrepancy by presenting a stable day-to-day dynamical system for drivers’ departure time choice at a single bottleneck. In our model, the decision variable in the execution stage is still drivers’ departure times on the next day, but in the planning stage before the execution stage, drivers determine their departure times in order to arrive at the destination at better times with lower scheduling costs. We first define within-day traffic dynamics with the point queue model, costs, the departure time user equilibrium (DTUE), and the arrival time user equilibrium (ATUE). We then identify three behavioral principles in the planning stage: (i) drivers choose their departure and arrival times in a backward fashion (backward choice principle); (ii) after choosing the arrival times, they update their departure times to balance the total costs (cost-balancing principle); (iii) they choose their arrival times to reduce their scheduling costs or gain their scheduling payoffs (scheduling cost–reducing or scheduling payoff–gaining principle). In this sense, drivers’ departure and arrival time choices are driven by their scheduling payoff choice. With a single tube or imaginary road model, we convert the nonlocal day-to-day arrival time shifting problem to a local scheduling payoff shifting problem. After introducing a new variable for the imaginary density, we apply the Lighthill–Whitham–Richards (LWR) model to describe the day-to-day dynamics of scheduling payoff choice and present splitting and cost-balancing schemes to determine arrival and departure flow rates accordingly. We define the scheduling payoff user equilibrium (SPUE) as the stationary state of the LWR model, formulate a new optimization problem for the SPUE, and prove the global stability of the SPUE and, therefore, ATUE and DTUE by using Lyapunov’s second method in which the objective function in the optimization formulation is the potential function. We also develop the corresponding discrete models for numerical solutions and use one numerical example to demonstrate the effectiveness and stability of the new day-to-day dynamical model. Different from existing ones, the new adjustment mechanism leads to stable day-to-day departure time choice dynamics by guaranteeing that drivers have better choices of departure/arrival times with larger scheduling payoffs on the next day, and such better choices are not over-chosen because of the constraint imposed by the single tube’s cross-section area, which is equal to the jam density in the LWR model. This study is the first step for understanding stable day-to-day dynamics for departure time choice, and many follow-up studies are possible and warranted.

Highlights

  • Congestion at critical bottlenecks, such as the SR-91 connecting the inland empire to beach cities in the Southern California, has motivated many studies on urban transportation analysis

  • The second behavioral principle is that drivers update their departure times to balance the total costs; i.e., their queueing costs have to be larger if their scheduling costs are smaller

  • Theorem 6.1 With the cost balancing principle, the equilibrium state (SPUE) of the LWR model is equivalent to both arrival time user equilibrium (ATUE) and departure time user equilibrium (DTUE)

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Summary

Introduction

Congestion at critical bottlenecks, such as the SR-91 connecting the inland empire to beach cities in the Southern California, has motivated many studies on urban transportation analysis. User equilibrium (UE) for drivers’ departure time choice at a single bottleneck has been well studied since (Vickrey, 1969; Hendrickson and Kocur, 1981; Small, 2015). A monetary cost for each trip is designated as a linear function in travel time, time early, time late, and/or toll (Arnott et al, 1990b) In other words, all commuters have the same total cost, and “no individual user can improve his total cost by unilaterally changing departure times” (Hendrickson and Kocur, 1981; Mahmassani and Herman, 1984) Such a departure time user equilibrium can be mathematically formulated as solutions of variational inequalities (e.g., Friesz et al, 1993; Szeto and Lo, 2004), optimization (linear programming) (Iryo and Yoshii, 2007), and linear complementarity problems (Akamatsu et al, 2015). (Guo et al, 2016, 2017) demonstrated that five systems of day-to-day flow shifting dynamics for departure time choices are all unstable and further questioned the existence of a stable user equilibrium at a single bottleneck.

Traffic flow variables and point queue model
Costs and user equilibrium
Behavioral principles and conceptual models for departure time choice
Departure time choice
Arrival time choice
Scheduling payoff choice
Mathematical models
The LWR model of scheduling payoff choice
Evolution of the arrival and departure flow-rates
Discrete models
The initial condition
The Cell Transmission Model
Calculation of arrival and departure flow-rates
Equilibrium state
Stability
Numerical example
Conclusion
Full Text
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