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Modelling Urban Public Transit Users' Route Choice Behaviour: A Review and Outlook

Modelling Urban Public Transit Users' Route Choice Behaviour: A Review and Outlook
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Author(s): Yulin Lee (Queensland University of Technology, Australia), Jonathan Bunker (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)and Luis Ferreira (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)
Copyright: 2010
Pages: 13
Source title: Rethinking Sustainable Development: Urban Management, Engineering, and Design
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Tan Yigitcanlar (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61692-022-7.ch010

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Abstract

Public transport is one of the key promoters of sustainable urban transport. To encourage and increase public transport patronage it is important to investigate the route choice behaviours of urban public transit users. This chapter reviews the main developments of modelling urban public transit users’ route choice behaviours in a historical perspective, from the 1960s to the present time. The approaches reviewed for this study include the early heuristic studies on finding the least-cost transit route and all-or-nothing transit assignment, the bus common lines problem, the disaggregate discrete choice models, the deterministic and stochastic user equilibrium transit assignment models, and the recent dynamic transit assignment models. This chapter also provides an outlook for the future directions of modelling transit users’ route choice behaviours. Through the comparison with the development of models for motorists’ route choice and traffic assignment problems, this chapter advocates that transit route choice research should draw inspiration from the research outcomes from the road area, and that the modelling practice of transit users’ route choice should further explore the behavioural complexities.

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