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We develop a short turning model using demand information from station to station within a single bus line-single period setting,
aimed at increasing the service frequency on the more loaded sections to deal with spatial concentration of demand considering
both operators’ and users’ costs. We find analytical expressions for optimal values of the design variables, namely frequencies
(inside and outside the short cycle), capacity of vehicles and the position of the short turn limit stations. These expressions
are used to analyze the influence of different parameters in the final solution. The design variables and the corresponding
cost components for operators and users (waiting and in-vehicle times) are compared against an optimized normal operation
scheme (single frequency). Applications on actual transit corridors exhibiting different demand profiles are conducted, calculating
the optimal values for the design variables and the resulting benefits for each case. Results show the typical demand configurations
that are better served using a short turn strategy. 相似文献
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In the last decade, significant research efforts and technology have been dedicated to the development of microsimulation tools for a better representation of traffic systems. As a result, several commercial packages appeared and they are used nowadays in the detailed modelling of different transportation systems and operations for specific project evaluations and local designs, mostly within the urban context. After reviewing the specialized literature, we realized that most of these microsimulation tools are oriented to the movement of cars, leaving the public transportation systems as a complement, just for a realistic representation of the transportation system as a whole, but always oriented to simulate cars. In this paper, the objective is to provide guidelines on how to incorporate the necessary entities and components for a proper simulation of public transport systems in a microsimulation environment. Thus, the different approaches to simulate transit systems at a microlevel are discussed, highlighting the necessity of including stops, passengers and transit vehicles explicitly as entities within the microsimulation environment, for modelling transfer operations, control strategies, etc. Several examples are then provided to quantify the impact of such representations, for different cases and potential simulation platforms. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 相似文献
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Jara-Díaz Sergio R. Martínez-Budría Eduardo Cortés Cristiín E Basso Leonardo 《Transportation》2002,29(4):419-437
A long run multioutput cost function for the infrastructure services of Spanish ports is estimated using 286 observations on 26 ports during 11 years. Cargo specific marginal costs and the degree of economies of scale and scope are calculated up to a port level. Results show that liquid bulk and non-containerised general cargo present the lowest and largest marginal cost, respectively. Increasing returns to scale are present in general and for each and every port. A scope analysis indicates that port specialisation is not appropriate from the viewpoint of infrastructure. 相似文献
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