Circular Image

Z. Wang

info

Please Note

3 records found

Master thesis (2023) - K. Huang, O. Cats, Z. Wang, R.M. Massobrio, A. Bombelli
Hierarchy is a network property that identifies the organisation and importance of network elements. Public transport systems consist of stops organised by connections, which can be regarded as networks. In a Public Transport Network (PTN) with a high hierarchy, the number of elements gradually decreases as their importance increases, where the majority of elements have low importance and a few high-important elements. The hierarchical organisations in PTNs contribute to the network performance by efficiently allocating resources based on the elements' importance. The hierarchy has been studied in transport with different methods and data sources. However, the topology-related quantification and comparison methodologies of PTN hierarchy and its mode-wise and continent-wise effects are scarce. A unified PTN hierarchy definition and the quantification methodology are necessary to enable PTN comparisons in terms of the network organisations and reflect the relative PTN performance.

Based on the current research gaps, this study develops topology-based PTN hierarchy quantification and comparison methodologies. First, six topological characteristics of PTN hierarchy are identified from the element scale (vertex accessibility, element intermediacy and vertex cluster importance) and network scales (scale-free structures, high-clustering structures and vertex connection pattern). Second, six element-based or network-based topological indicators are selected to quantify the topological characteristics. For element-based indicators (vertex degree centrality, closeness centrality, betweenness centrality and eigenvector centrality), the coefficient of determination (R square) of the indicator's probability density distribution fitting the skewed normal distribution represents the PTN hierarchy. For network-based indicators (modularity coefficient and assortativity coefficient), the quantified indicator values represent the PTN hierarchy. Next, the radar chart is developed for comprehensively assessing the normalised six-dimension PTN hierarchy.

To evaluate the performance of the methodology, a database based on the GTFS data containing topological information of 63 high-capacity unimodal PTNs worldwide is applied with the hierarchy quantification methodology as a case study. In the PTN hierarchy comparison, the hierarchy in the closeness centrality and betweenness centrality are prone to be high and have higher importance for PTN operation, reflecting the hierarchical organisations of stops' accessibility and the traffic intermediacy on infrastructures. PTN hierarchy in the eigenvector centrality and network modularity dimensions reflect the mono-centric or multi-centric network structures. In the vertex degree centrality and network assortativity dimensions, the identified PTN hierarchy topological characteristics are less significant. In mode-wise effects analysis, the order of modes having PTN hierarchy from high to low is metro, tram and BRT networks. The continent-wise effects show that the European PTNs usually have a higher hierarchy than North American PTNs.

Overall, the research offers a unified topology-based PTN hierarchy as a network property. This study's quantification and comparison methodologies bring a comprehensive multi-dimension and intuitive perspective for PTN hierarchy with the radar chart representation. With the case study, the six-dimension PTN hierarchy, the mode-wise and continent-wise effects are analysed. The methodology benefits the universal PTN performance comparison with basic topological information. ...
Master thesis (2023) - R. ZHOU, R.M.P. Goverde, Z. Wang, G. Homem de Almeida Correia, Edith Philipsen
With the strong backing and advocacy from the EU for railway transport, it is crucial to focus on innovative and efficient technologies to maintain service quality. In daily train operations, traffic uncertainties lead to perturbations, which may result in two types of track conflicts: disturbances and disruptions.

In the current research, we aim to add and optimize timetable flexibility in traffic disturbance management for railway transport. A new definition is proposed for timetable flexibility. Timetable flexibility is defined as the ability of a timetable to be easily modified to withstand small disturbances and absorb delays, as well as to offer a larger solution space in the application of dispatching measures (retiming, reordering, rerouting) to solve larger disturbances without changing the given (re)scheduled timetable.
In order to minimize the deviation of the rescheduling plan from the rigid timetable, and maximize the timetable flexibility, the conflict resolution problem is modeled using an Alternative Graph (AG)-based Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) model.

In order to investigate the impacts of different parameter inputs on timetable flexibility, a case study is conducted on a part of the Dutch railway network. To investigate the influencing factors of timetable flexibility, one illustrative application and two sensitivity analyses are conducted. Based on the results, practical implications on train dispatchers and signalers, as well as on railway passengers are concluded. ...