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N. A. Ronald edited this page May 17, 2014 · 2 revisions

SUMOoD

  • Installation
  • Scenarios
  • Running
  • Creating your own environment (forthcoming)
  • Creating your own demand (forthcoming)
  • Creating your own DRT scheme (forthcoming)

About

SUMOoD v0.1 is based on a model of demand-responsive transportation developed by Kanchana Sakulchariyalert, Russell Thompson, John Haasz, Stephan Winter and Priyan Mendis in Delphi [1]. This software was developed further by John Haasz, John McDonald and Nicole Ronald [2]. In this software, vehicles use a variant of the DARP (Dial-a-Ride Problem) algorithm to pick up and drop off passengers at nodes in a network. While pre-booking rides is permitted by the software, it was used to experiment with ad-hoc (e.g., immediate pickups) only.

This model was replicated in SUMO using the TraCI Python interface. SUMOoD deals with ad-hoc requests from passengers wanting to travel between two locations. Passengers were restricted to nodes so that results of both models could be compared. In this case, it meant a node was represented by one outgoing link in SUMO, about 50 metres past the intersection.

For more information about the model and potential extensions, please see http://imod-au.info/sumood.

References

[1] Thompson, R. G., Sakulchariyalert, K., Haasz, J., Winter, S. and Mendis, P. (2011), Determining the Viability of a Demand Responsive Transport System, published at http://imod-au.info/thompson11/.

[2] Ronald, N., Thompson, R. G., Haasz, J. and Winter, S. (2013), Determining the Viability of a Demand-Responsive Transport System under Varying Demand Scenarios. Proceedings of the 6th ACM SIGSPATIAL International Workshop on Computational Transportation Science, Orlando, Florida.

Acknowledgements

This work has been supported by the Australian Research Council (LP120200130).

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