Heatmap Design for Probabilistic Driver Repositioning in Crowdsourced Delivery

Author:

Alnaggar Aliaa1ORCID,Gzara Fatma2ORCID,Bookbinder James2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mechanical, Industrial, and Mechatronics Engineering Department, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, Ontario M5B 2K3, Canada;

2. Management Science and Engineering Department, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada

Abstract

This paper proposes the use of heatmaps as a control lever to manage the probabilistic repositioning of independent drivers in crowdsourced delivery platforms. The platform aims to maximize order fulfillment by dynamically matching drivers and orders and selecting heatmaps that trigger the probabilistic flow of unmatched drivers to balance driver supply and delivery requests across the service region. We develop a Markov decision process (MDP) model to sequentially select matching and heatmap decisions in which the repositioning behavior of drivers is captured by a multinomial logit discrete choice model. Because of the curse of dimensionality and the endogenous uncertainty of driver repositioning, the MDP model is solved using a rolling-horizon stochastic lookahead policy. This policy decomposes matching and heatmap decisions into two optimization problems: a two-stage stochastic programming upper bounding problem for matching decisions and a mixed-integer programming problem for heatmap decisions. We also propose a simple policy for efficiently solving large-scale problems. An extensive computational study on instances derived from the Chicago ride-hailing data set is conducted. Computational experiments demonstrate the value of heatmaps in improving order fulfillment beyond the level achieved by matching alone (up to 25%) and identify conditions that affect the benefit of using heatmaps to guide driver repositioning. Funding: The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada through Discovery Grants [Grants RGPIN-2024-04881, RGPIN-2020-04498, and RGPIN-2019-06207] awarded to the first, second, and third authors, respectively. Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/trsc.2022.0418 .

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Reference56 articles.

1. Transportation-Enabled Services: Concept, Framework, and Research Opportunities

2. Alnaggar A (2021) Optimization under uncertainty for e-retail distribution: From suppliers to the last mile. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Waterloo, ON, Canada.

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