When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mode choice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_choice

    Mode choice analysis is the third step in the conventional four-step transportation forecasting model of transportation planning, following trip distribution and preceding route assignment. From origin-destination table inputs provided by trip distribution, mode choice analysis allows the modeler to determine probabilities that travelers will ...

  3. Transportation forecasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_forecasting

    Transportation forecasting is the attempt of estimating the number of vehicles or people that will use a specific transportation facility in the future. For instance, a forecast may estimate the number of vehicles on a planned road or bridge, the ridership on a railway line, the number of passengers visiting an airport, or the number of ships calling on a seaport.

  4. Traffic simulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_simulation

    Microscopic models study individual elements of transportation systems, such as individual vehicle dynamics and individual traveler behavior. Mesoscopic models analyze transportation elements in small groups, within which elements are considered homogeneous. A typical example is vehicle platoon dynamics and household-level travel behavior.

  5. Transport network analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_network_analysis

    A transport network, or transportation network, is a network or graph in geographic space, describing an infrastructure that permits and constrains movement or flow. [1] Examples include but are not limited to road networks , railways , air routes , pipelines , aqueducts , and power lines .

  6. Traffic model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_model

    Traffic modeling draws heavily on theoretical foundations like network theory and certain theories from physics like the kinematic wave model. The interesting quantity being modeled and measured is the traffic flow , i.e. the throughput of mobile units (e.g. vehicles ) per time and transportation medium capacity (e.g. road or lane width).

  7. Mode of transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_of_transport

    In general, transportation refers to the moving of people, animals, and other goods from one place to another, and means of transport refers to the transport facilities used to carry people or cargo according to the chosen mode. Examples of the means of transport include automobile, airplane, ship, truck, and train.

  8. Route assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Route_assignment

    Route assignment, route choice, or traffic assignment concerns the selection of routes (alternatively called paths) between origins and destinations in transportation networks. It is the fourth step in the conventional transportation forecasting model, following trip generation, trip distribution, and mode choice. The zonal interchange analysis ...

  9. Spoke–hub distribution paradigm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoke–hub_distribution...

    Point-to-point (top) vs hub-and-spoke (bottom) networks. The hub-and-spoke model, as compared to the point-to-point model, requires fewer routes. For a network of n nodes, only n − 1 routes are necessary to connect all nodes so the upper bound is n − 1, and the complexity is O(n).