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de Ruijter, A.J.F. (author), Cats, O. (author), van Lint, J.W.C. (author)
Limited available market share data seems to suggest that ridesourcing platforms benefit from, even thrive on, socio-economic inequality. We suspect that this is associated with high levels of socio-economic inequality allowing for cheap labour as well as increasing the share of travellers with a considerably above-average willingness to pay...
journal article 2024
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de Ruijter, A.J.F. (author), Cats, O. (author), Alonso-Mora, J. (author), Hoogendoorn, S.P. (author)
Previous studies into the potential benefits of ride pooling failed to account for the trade-off that users likely make when considering a shared ride. We address this shortcoming by formulating user net benefit stemming from pooling as a compensatory function where the additional travel time and on-board discomfort need to be compensated by...
journal article 2023
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de Ruijter, A.J.F. (author), Cats, O. (author), Kucharski, R.M. (author), van Lint, J.W.C. (author)
Contrary to traditional transit services, supply in ridesourcing systems emerges from individual labour decisions of gig workers. The effect of decentralisation in supply on the evolution of on-demand transit services is largely unknown. To this end, we propose a dynamic model comprising of the subsequent supply-side processes: (i) initial...
journal article 2022