scholarly journals Calculate Travel Time and Distance with Openstreetmap Data Using the Open Source Routing Machine (OSRM)

Author(s):  
Stephan Huber ◽  
Christoph Rust
2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bow-Nan Cheng ◽  
Randy Charland ◽  
Paul Christensen ◽  
Andrea Coyle ◽  
Edward Kuczynski ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Hong Chen ◽  
Hongchao Liu ◽  
Wei Li ◽  
Yibin Zhang

Origin-destination- (O-D-) based travel time reliability (TTR) is fundamental to next-generation navigation tools aiming to provide both travel time and reliability information. While previous works are mostly focused on route-based TTR and use either ad hoc data or simulation in the analyses, this study uses open-source Uber Movement and Weather Underground data to systematically analyze the impact of rainfall intensity on O-D-based travel time reliability. The authors classified three years of travel time data in downtown Boston into one hundred origin-destination pairs and integrated them with the weather data (rain). A lognormal mixture model was applied to fit travel time distributions and calculate the buffer index. The median, trimmed mean, interquartile range, and one-way analysis of variance were used for quantification of the characteristics. The study found some results that tended to agree with the previous findings in the literature, such that, in general, rain reduces the O-D-based travel time reliability, and some seemed to be unique and worthy of discussion: firstly, although in general the reduction in travel time reliability gets larger as the intensity of rainfall increases, it appears that the change is more significant when rainfall intensity changes from light to moderate but becomes fairly marginal when it changes from normal to light or from moderate to extremely intensive; secondly, regardless of normal or rainy weather, the O-D-based travel time reliability and its consistency in different O-D pairs with similar average travel time always tend to improve along with the increase of average travel time. In addition to the technical findings, this study also contributes to the state of the art by promoting the application of real-world and publicly available data in TTR analyses.


Author(s):  
V. Eramo ◽  
M. Listanti ◽  
A. Cianfrani ◽  
E. Cipollone
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youngjoon Kim ◽  
Jinhyung Lee ◽  
Junghwan Kim ◽  
Naoto Nakajima

Transportation is a key element to understanding the socio-spatial structure of colonial cities and the lives of individuals living under colonial governance. This study investigates the disparity in transit-based travel time between colonial rulers (Japanese) and subjects (Koreans) in Colonial Seoul (Keijo) in 1936 using modern GIS and open-source transport analysis tools. Findings suggest a significant disparity in travel time to a major urban facility (i.e., City Hall) between the two population groups of the largest colonial city in the Korean peninsula.


Author(s):  
Fadi P. Deek ◽  
James A. M. McHugh
Keyword(s):  

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