Abstract

The National Performance Management Research Data Set (NPMRDS), made available by Federal Highway Administration in 2013, provides fine-resolution travel-time data, which have been used in numerous network performance management and operations applications. This article discusses corridor-level performance measures computed using the NPMRDS. Three measures are analyzed on a 20.2-mile long corridor in San Antonio, Texas, including corridor travel time, corridor travel-time reliability, and day-to-day variation in travel time. The primary contributions of this article are the analysis of the impact of using two different approaches for travel-time aggregation across segments—instantaneous and time-dependent approaches—and defining a mean absolute error-based method to identify days when travel times significantly deviate from typical traffic conditions. The findings suggest that the temporal patterns of corridor travel times obtained using instantaneous and time-dependent aggregation approaches are similar; however, instantaneous travel-time estimates lead to inaccuracies that become more apparent during peak hours and for longer segments. In addition, it is found that a [Formula: see text]-means clustering analysis performed on daily travel-time profiles provides a useful statistic for corridor performance analysis. Using this methodology, 9.23% of weekdays in the 20-month study period are classified as atypical for the corridor. The numerical results reinforce the value of the NPMRDS in estimating corridor performance measures and highlight potential limitations of traditional techniques for evaluating corridor performance measures when applied in practice to support enhanced traffic planning and operations.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call