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      Calculation Method for Load Capacity of Urban Rail Transit Station considering Cascading Failure

      1 , 1 , 1
      Journal of Advanced Transportation
      Hindawi Limited

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          Abstract

          The load capacity of urban rail transit station is of great significance to provide reference in station design and operation management. However, it is difficult to carry out quantitative calculation quickly and accurately due to the complex interaction among passenger behaviors, facility layout, and the limit capacity of single facility. In this paper, the association network of facilities is set up based on the analysis of passenger service chain in station. Then the concept of cascading failure is introduced to the dynamic calculation model of load capacity, which is established on the user-equilibrium allocation model. The solution algorithm is optimized with node attack strategy of complex network to effectively reduce the computational complexity. Finally, a case study of Lujiabang Road Station in Shanghai is carried out and compared with the simulation results of StaPass, verifying the feasibility of this approach. The proposed method can not only search for the bottleneck of capacity, but also help to trace the loading variation of facilities network in different scenarios, providing theoretical supports on passenger flow organization.

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          An algorithm for quadratic programming

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            Simulation of pedestrian dynamics using a 2-dimensional cellular automaton

            We propose a 2-dimensional cellular automaton model to simulate pedestrian traffic. It is a vmax=1 model with exclusion statistics and parallel dynamics. Long-range interactions between the pedestrians are mediated by a so called floor field which modifies the transition rates to neighbouring cells. This field, which can be discrete or continuous, is subject to diffusion and decay. Furthermore it can be modified by the motion of the pedestrians. Therefore the model uses an idea similar to chemotaxis, but with pedestrians following a virtual rather than a chemical trace. Our main goal is to show that the introduction of such a floor field is sufficient to model collective effects and self-organization encountered in pedestrian dynamics, e.g. lane formation in counterflow through a large corridor. As an application we also present simulations of the evacuation of a large room with reduced visibility, e.g. due to failure of lights or smoke.
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              Numerical potential field techniques for robot path planning

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Advanced Transportation
                Journal of Advanced Transportation
                Hindawi Limited
                0197-6729
                2042-3195
                2018
                2018
                : 2018
                : 1-12
                Affiliations
                [1 ]The Key Laboratory of Road and Traffic Engineering of the State Ministry of Education, Tongji University, 4800 Cao’an Road, Jiading District, Shanghai 201804, China
                Article
                10.1155/2018/6318516
                b43c65f7-a409-4d8a-851e-fd0e558adc54
                © 2018

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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