Abstract:Commuting by transfer in the public transit network is a green travel choice compared to private cars which should be encouraged when direct transit lines cannot take the commuters to their destinations. Therefore, transfer commuting attitudes are important for finding appropriate ways to attract more transfer commuters. Firstly, since attitudes are usually unobserved, a combined revealed preference (RP) and stated preference (SP) survey was conducted in Nanjing, China to obtain the observed attitudinal variables. Then the market segmentation approach including the factor analysis, the structural equation modelling (SEM) model and the K-means clustering method was used to identify the underlying attitudinal factors and variables and analyze the interrelationship between them. Six segments were identified by four key factors including the willingness to transfer, the sensitivity to time, the need for flexibility and the desire for comfort. The sensitivity to time is the most important factor for commuters influencing their willingness to transfer. The socio-economic features of each segment were also analyzed and compared. The result shows that socio-economic features have a great impact on the willingness to transfer. Corresponding policy and strategy implications to increase transfer commuting proportion were finally proposed.
The urban multimodal transport network is composed of multiple layers of networks; thus, coordinating the capacity equilibrium among different sub-transport networks plays a crucial role to keep the entire network running efficiently. To quantify and evaluate the passenger flow distribution in an urban multimodal transport network, this research proposes a method to evaluate the capacity coordination in an urban multimodal transport network on the basis of assignment results calculated by the Stochastic User Equilibrium (SUE) model considering the link and path impedance of different sub-transport networks. It suggests evaluation functions for the indicator level of service (LOS) of the multimodal transport network, Gini coefficient of transport network, and mode share of transport modes, and it shows how the functions were estimated. Then, it reports on results with the evaluation scheme collected in a multimodal example application for roadway network, transit networks (bus transit network and urban rail transit network), and connection network. The evaluation results under different assumed origin–destination (OD) demand show the coordination degree and can be used to recognize shortcomings of the network. Moreover, the OD demand interval of real network with good coordination can be deduced, which can also help transport planners to find the optimal strategy.
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