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The impact of complexity in the built environment on vehicular routing behavior: Insights from an empirical study of taxi mobility in Beijing, China

Published 24 Apr 2024 in stat.AP, cs.CY, and physics.data-an | (2404.15589v2)

Abstract: The modeling of disaggregated vehicular mobility and its associations with the ambient urban built environment is essential for developing operative transport intervention and urban optimization plans. However, established vehicular route choice models failed to fully consider the bounded behavioral rationality and the complex characteristics of the urban built environment affecting drivers' route choice preference. Therefore, the spatio-temporal characteristics of vehicular mobility patterns were not fully explained, which limited the granular implementation of relevant transport interventions. To address this limitation, we proposed a vehicular route choice model that mimics the anchoring effect and the exposure preference while driving. The proposed model enables us to quantitatively examine the impact of the built environment on vehicular routing behavior, which has been largely neglected in previous studies. Results show that the proposed model performs 12% better than the conventional vehicular route choice model based on the shortest path principle. Our empirical analysis of taxi drivers' routing behavior patterns in Beijing, China uncovers that drivers are inclined to choose routes with shorter time duration and with less loss at traversal intersections. Counterintuitively, we also found that drivers heavily rely on circuitous ring roads and expressways to deliver passengers, which are unexpectedly longer than the shortest paths. Moreover, characteristics of the urban built environment including road eccentricity, centrality, average road length, land use diversity, sky visibility, and building coverage can affect drivers' route choice behaviors, accounting for about 5% of the increase in the proposed model's performance. We also refine the above explorations according to the modeling results of trips that differ in departure time, travel distance, and occupation status.

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