Does Combining Transit Signal Priority with Dedicated Bus Lanes or Queue Jump Lanes at Multiple Intersections Create Multiplier Effects?

Author(s):  
Long T. Truong ◽  
Graham Currie ◽  
Mark Wallace ◽  
Chris De Gruyter

An extensive body of literature deals with the design and operation of public transport (PT) priority measures. However, there is a need to understand whether providing transit signal priority with dedicated bus lanes (TSPwDBL) or transit signal priority with queue jump lanes (TSPwQJL) at multiple intersections creates a multiplier effect on PT benefits. If the benefit from providing priority together at multiple intersections is greater than the sum of benefits from providing priority separately at each of those individual intersections, a multiplier effect exists. This paper explores the effects of providing TSPwDBL or TSPwQJL at multiple intersections on bus delay savings and person delay savings. Simulation results reveal that providing TSPwDBL or TSPwQJL at multiple intersections may create a multiplier effect on one-directional bus delay savings, particularly when signal offsets provide bus progression for that direction. The multiplier effect may result in a 5% to 8% increase in bus delay savings for each additional intersection with TSPwDBL or TSPwQJL. A possible explanation is that TSPwDBL and TSPwQJL can reduce the variations in bus travel times and thus allow signal offsets—which account for bus progression—to perform even better. Furthermore, results show little evidence of the existence of a multiplier effect on person delay savings, particularly for TSPwQJL with offsets that favor person delay savings. A policy implication of these findings is that considerable PT benefits can be achieved by providing both time and space priority in combination on a corridorwide scale.

Author(s):  
Kan Wu ◽  
S. Ilgin Guler

Transit signal priority (TSP) is a common method of providing priority to buses at signalized intersections. The implementation of TSP can affect travel time of cars traveling in the same, opposite, and cross directions. The bus delay savings and car travel-time impacts are not expected to increase linearly when considering multiple intersections along an arterial. This paper quantifies the influence of TSP on arterials with dedicated bus lanes considering an arterial-wide approach utilizing variational theory. Existing tools were modified to quantify the change in capacity along an arterial where TSP was implemented and it was shown that this effect was negligible. In addition, the bus delay savings and cross-street capacity losses were determined. Case studies provided insights into the influence of TSP among different network homogeneities and bus frequencies. Using these tools, an optimization framework was developed to determine where to implement TSP along an arterial to maximize the marginal benefits, or minimize marginal costs. In addition, a comparison of evaluating an arterial as a sum of isolated intersections as opposed to evaluating an arterial as a whole is presented. This analysis indicates the necessity of the arterial-based method in considering TSP impacts along corridors.


Agro Ekonomi ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Hani Perwitasari ◽  
Irham Irham ◽  
Jamhari Jamhari

The purpose of this research are (1) to identify changes in the structure of Indonesia’s economi, (2) to identifty backward linkage and forward linkage between agriculture sector eith other sctors in economic structure of Indonesia, (3) to know the multiplier effect of output, income, employment and grows value added of agriculture sector. The research analyzed Input-Output data, the domestic transaction based on producer price, that in classified 66 sectors published by the Cnetral Statistics Agency (BPS) uidng Input-Output Analysis.These result indicate that ini 1975 until 2008 the structure of Indonesia’s economy has changed towards industrialization. Backward linkage and forward linkage between the agriculture sectora are under the average backward linkage and the forward linkage of economy all sector in Indonesia. Multiplier effect to output, income, employment in the agricultural sector are the average of output multiplier effect income, employment sectors of the economy throughout Indonesia but the gross value added in above-average gross value added multiplier effects throught the economy of Indonesia. 


Author(s):  
Long Tien Truong ◽  
Majid Sarvi ◽  
Graham Currie

Numerous studies have explored design and evaluation of bus lane priority by using empirical, analytical, and simulation approaches. However, none attempted to understand how different bus lane combinations, such as continuous and discontinuous bus lane sections, and a different number of bus lane sections, affect bus performance and general traffic. This paper investigates operational effects of bus lane combinations to establish whether multiple bus lane sections create a multiplier effect in which a series of continuous bus lane sections creates more benefits than several single-lane sections. If a multiplier effect exists, it suggests scale economies in wider implementation of bus priority on a networkwide scale. Overall, results confirm that there is a multiplier effect; thus bus travel time benefits and general traffic travel time disbenefits are proportional to the number of links with a bus lane. The effect suggests a constant return to scale on continuous multiple sections. The results also suggest that converting a traffic lane to a bus lane when the upstream traffic volume exceeds the capacity of the remaining traffic lanes causes significant negative effects for buses and general traffic. In addition, negative general traffic effects of continuous bus lane combinations are lower than those for a similar number of discontinuous bus lanes. Bus delays at intersections approaching the bus lane tend to improve when upstream traffic volume does not exceed the capacity of remaining downstream traffic lanes. Policy implications and areas for future research are suggested.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fujin Yi ◽  
Wuyi Lu ◽  
Yingheng Zhou

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the multiplier effects of the grain subsidy program in China, which is a large food self-sufficiency project that is implemented as a cash transfer program. Income multiplier effects have not been empirically examined in the evaluation of the grain subsidy program although increasing the income of farmers is the original goal of this project. Design/methodology/approach – A large number of household-level observations are employed to measure the program’s income multiplier. An unrestricted model was first employed to measure the multipliers in a period of two years, and the difference was evaluated. Then, the income promotion effects of grain subsidy on various income sources for each specific subset of the population, such as liquidity conditions and household characteristics, were estimated. Findings – The results show that the grain subsidy program has a high income multiplier, and the income promotion effect of the transferred subsidies is from agricultural production derived by intensifying input for each unit of land. The multiplier effect of the grain subsidy program as a cash transfer program can be interpreted as the shadow value of relaxing liquidity constraints and could be particularly utilized by households with more farming land and farmers in less developed regions in China. Hence, to maximize the income multiplier effect, the grain subsidy distribution method should consider these criteria instead of retaining the prevalent standard that is based on contracted land areas. Originality/value – This study addresses the gap that the effect of China’s grain subsidy program on income increment has not been empirically examined in nation wide.


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 154-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad S. Ghanim ◽  
Francois Dion ◽  
Ghassan Abu-Lebdeh

Transit signal priority (TSP) is an operational control strategy that provides preferential treatments for transit vehicles at signalized intersections. Many transit agencies are currently considering the implementation of priority systems providing buses with preferential treatments at signalized intersections. While studies have demonstrated potential bus delay reductions, none has attempted to identify the problems posed by variable dwell times at bus stops. This study identifies the impacts of variable dwell times on the efficiency of transit signal priority systems. Results also show that, in general, variable dwell times negatively affect the TSP performance. However, and contrary to expectations, a number of scenarios with variable dwell times resulted in lower average bus delays than scenarios with fixed dwell times. These results are attributed to changes in progression and bus arrival patterns under variable dwell times resulting in an increasing number of buses arriving close enough to benefit from preferential treatments.


Author(s):  
Ol'ga Lebedeva

The article describes the main features of the optimization model, which can be used to design a network of urban public transport. Design tasks can be solved using a model that allows you to redesign a part of the network or the entire network as a whole. The model consists of an additive procedure in which the decision to include a route in the network or increase the interval of movement is based on an economic criterion - an estimate of the Lagrange multiplier for the optimization problem. The main advantage of the model is that the design problem is solved only through the optimization process. The optimization process remains understandable, and the model does not require the use of special software. The simulation results are given in the article.


2018 ◽  
pp. 03-05
Author(s):  
L. V. Lapochkina ◽  
E. N. Vetrova

This paper presents the study multiplier effects of government regulation of industrial development of the macro-region by the example of the Russian Arctic (Russian Arctic), made in the process of writing a doctoral dissertation Lapochkin LV on «Industrial policy of the Arctic zone of Russia: theoretical and methodological basis» and its discussion in the St. Petersburg State University of Economics. The novelty of the study is: first, in the view of the Russian Arctic as a macro-region; secondly, forming a conceptual model of a multiplier based on the criterion of national economic efficiency and system constraints, reflecting the direction of the structural industrial policy with regard to the development of non-oil economy; in the third, the formulation of multiplier effects in the fields and methods of exposure. The purpose of this article is to analyze the multiplier effects of government regulation of industrial development of the macro-region of the Arctic, as a basis for the construction of the multiplier model.


Transport ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 386-397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuedong Hua ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
Yinhai Wang ◽  
Ziyuan Pu

Transit signal priority (TSP) is a promising low-cost strategy that gives preferential treatments for the buses to go through intersections with minimum delay time. In this paper, a new TSP control model was presented for isolated intersections to minimize bus delay and to reduce the impact of TSP on other vehicles by optimizing signal control phase selection and compression. This paper starts with the phase selection and compression strategies to provide treatments to bus priority requests. Then, two new features on phase selection and compression aspects are applied to TSP, i.e. the time that a bus priority request needs is provided by the phase(s) with the lowest traffic volume, and multi-phases can be selected to serve a bus request. Field data are collected from a major traffic corridor in Changzhou (China) and applied for VISSIM simulation. The proposed TSP control model as well as the fixed-time control and the conventional TSP control models are tested and compared under different traffic demands, headways and maximum saturation degrees. The comparative results showed that the proposed model outperformed the conventional TSP control model in terms of reducing bus delay, minimizing the impact on other vehicles and reducing the stop rate for buses. This paper reveals that, the proposed TSP strategy can significantly optimize the phase compression process and improve transit efficiency.


2011 ◽  
Vol 143-144 ◽  
pp. 864-868
Author(s):  
De Jiao Niu ◽  
Tao Cai ◽  
Yong Zhao Zhan ◽  
Shi Guang Ju

The efficiency of metadata indexing is important to the performance of distributed file system. Time and space spending of current metadata management algorithms are unstable. In this paper, we use B-tree to index the metadata of distributed file system. Lustre is an open source distributed file system in which Hash function is used to manage the metadata. We implement the prototype of metadata indexing sub-system on Lustre and use Iozone to test the I/O performance of Lustre with and without the metadata indexing sub-system respectively. The simulation results show that Lustre with the metadata indexing sub-system has higher adaptability than Lustre with Hash-based metadata management algorithm.


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