Simultaneous Travel Model Estimation from Survey Data and Traffic Counts

This paper presents the successful application of a new method to improve travel demand forecasting models by taking advantage of cheap and readily available traffic count data and using them together with household travel survey data to inform the model’s parameter estimates. Although traffic counts are frequently used in an ad hoc manner in the validation of travel model components, this paper presents a more rigorous, structured, and statistically efficient method to allow the information contained in traffic counts to influence the selection of model parameters simultaneously with household survey data. This formal process allows traffic counts to inform indirectly, but importantly, related parameters, such as destination choice utility functions, through formal statistical inference when human inference would be difficult, if not impossible, because of the complexity of the system and when manual random trial and error would be time- and cost-prohibitive. The approach used a genetic algorithm metaheuristic to implement a composite log likelihood and a pseudocomposite log likelihood maximization in the development of a new travel model for the South Bend, Indiana, urban area for the Michiana Area Council of Governments. The process made use of a set of parameters transferred from another region and resulted in new parameters that produced significantly better consistency in the model with both local survey data and counts. Although computationally intense, this exciting new approach showed promise, at least for midsized urban areas.

Language

  • English

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Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 01559052
  • Record Type: Publication
  • ISBN: 9780309369466
  • Report/Paper Numbers: 15-5905
  • Files: PRP, TRIS, TRB, ATRI
  • Created Date: Mar 31 2015 4:56PM