Quantifying navigation complexity in transportation networks

Author:

Jiang Zhuojun1ORCID,Dong Lei1,Wu Lun1,Liu Yu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Remote Sensing and Geographical Information Systems, School of Earth and Space Sciences, Peking University , Beijing 100871, China

Abstract

Abstract The complexity of navigation in cities has increased with the expansion of urban areas, creating challenging transportation problems that drive many studies on the navigability of networks. However, due to the lack of individual mobility data, large-scale empirical analysis of the wayfinder’s real-world navigation is rare. Here, using 225 million subway trips from three major cities in China, we quantify navigation difficulty from an information perspective. Our results reveal that (1) people conserve a small number of repeatedly used routes and (2) the navigation information in the subnetworks formed by those routes is much smaller than the theoretical value in the global network, suggesting that the decision cost for actual trips is significantly smaller than the theoretical upper limit found in previous studies. By modeling routing behaviors in growing networks, we show that while the global network becomes difficult to navigate, navigability can be improved in subnetworks. We further present a universal linear relationship between the empirical and theoretical search information, which allows the two metrics to predict each other. Our findings demonstrate how large-scale observations can quantify real-world navigation behaviors and aid in evaluating transportation planning.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference54 articles.

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