Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework

Bus route planning is a challenging task due to multiple perspective interactions among passengers, service providers, and government agencies. This paper presents a multidimensional Stackelberg-game-based framework and mathematical model to best trade off the decisions of multiple stakeholders that...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xinyu Liu, Jie Yu, Xiaoguang Yang, Weijie Tan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi-Wiley 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Advanced Transportation
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1801320
id doaj-eb33d72e99744ff19731bf1e95777ba0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-eb33d72e99744ff19731bf1e95777ba02020-12-07T09:08:22ZengHindawi-WileyJournal of Advanced Transportation0197-67292042-31952020-01-01202010.1155/2020/18013201801320Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game FrameworkXinyu Liu0Jie Yu1Xiaoguang Yang2Weijie Tan3Key Laboratory of Road and Traffic Engineering of the Ministry of Education, Tongji University, 4800 Cao’an Road, Shanghai 201804, ChinaDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, P.O. Box 784, Milwaukee, WI 53201, USAKey Laboratory of Road and Traffic Engineering of the Ministry of Education, Tongji University, 4800 Cao’an Road, Shanghai 201804, ChinaDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, P.O. Box 784, Milwaukee, WI 53201, USABus route planning is a challenging task due to multiple perspective interactions among passengers, service providers, and government agencies. This paper presents a multidimensional Stackelberg-game-based framework and mathematical model to best trade off the decisions of multiple stakeholders that previous literature rarely captures, i.e., governments, service providers, and passengers, in planning a new bus route or adjusting an existing one. The proposed model features a bilevel structure with the upper level reflecting the perspective of government agencies in subsidy allocation and the lower level representing the decisions of service providers in dispatching frequency and bus fleet size design. The bilevel model is framed as a Stackelberg game where government agencies take the role of “leader” and service providers take the role of “follower” with social costs and profits set as payoffs, respectively. This Stackelberg-game-based framework can reflect the decision sequence of both participants as well as their competition or collaboration relationship in planning a bus route. The impact of such decisions on the mode and route choices of passengers is captured by a Nested Logit model. A partition-based bisection algorithm is developed to solve the proposed model. Results from a case study in Shanghai validate the effectiveness and performance of the proposed model and algorithm.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1801320
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xinyu Liu
Jie Yu
Xiaoguang Yang
Weijie Tan
spellingShingle Xinyu Liu
Jie Yu
Xiaoguang Yang
Weijie Tan
Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework
Journal of Advanced Transportation
author_facet Xinyu Liu
Jie Yu
Xiaoguang Yang
Weijie Tan
author_sort Xinyu Liu
title Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework
title_short Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework
title_full Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework
title_fullStr Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework
title_full_unstemmed Multiperspective Bus Route Planning in a Stackelberg Game Framework
title_sort multiperspective bus route planning in a stackelberg game framework
publisher Hindawi-Wiley
series Journal of Advanced Transportation
issn 0197-6729
2042-3195
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Bus route planning is a challenging task due to multiple perspective interactions among passengers, service providers, and government agencies. This paper presents a multidimensional Stackelberg-game-based framework and mathematical model to best trade off the decisions of multiple stakeholders that previous literature rarely captures, i.e., governments, service providers, and passengers, in planning a new bus route or adjusting an existing one. The proposed model features a bilevel structure with the upper level reflecting the perspective of government agencies in subsidy allocation and the lower level representing the decisions of service providers in dispatching frequency and bus fleet size design. The bilevel model is framed as a Stackelberg game where government agencies take the role of “leader” and service providers take the role of “follower” with social costs and profits set as payoffs, respectively. This Stackelberg-game-based framework can reflect the decision sequence of both participants as well as their competition or collaboration relationship in planning a bus route. The impact of such decisions on the mode and route choices of passengers is captured by a Nested Logit model. A partition-based bisection algorithm is developed to solve the proposed model. Results from a case study in Shanghai validate the effectiveness and performance of the proposed model and algorithm.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1801320
work_keys_str_mv AT xinyuliu multiperspectivebusrouteplanninginastackelberggameframework
AT jieyu multiperspectivebusrouteplanninginastackelberggameframework
AT xiaoguangyang multiperspectivebusrouteplanninginastackelberggameframework
AT weijietan multiperspectivebusrouteplanninginastackelberggameframework
_version_ 1715013565317906432