Quantifying changes in bicycle volumes using crowdsourced data

Author:

Al-Ramini Ali1ORCID,Takallou Mohammad A2,Piatkowski Daniel P3,Alsaleem Fadi4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mechanical and Materials Department, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Omaha, NE, USA

2. Architectural Engineering Department, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Omaha, NE, USA

3. Civil Engineering and Energy Technology, Oslo Metropolitan University, Lincoln, NE, USA

4. Durham School of Architectural Engineering and Construction, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Omaha, NE, USA

Abstract

Most cities in the United States lack comprehensive or connected bicycle infrastructure; therefore, inexpensive and easy-to-implement solutions for connecting existing bicycle infrastructure are increasingly being employed. Signage is one of the promising solutions. However, the necessary data for evaluating its effect on cycling ridership is lacking. To overcome this challenge, this study tests the potential of using readily-available crowdsourced data in concert with machine-learning methods to provide insight into signage intervention effectiveness. We do this by assessing a natural experiment to identify the potential effects of adding or replacing signage within existing bicycle infrastructure in 2019 in the city of Omaha, Nebraska. Specifically, we first visually compare cycling traffic changes in 2019 to those from the previous two years (2017–2018) using data extracted from the Strava fitness app. Then, we use a new three-step machine-learning approach to quantify the impact of signage while controlling for weather, demographics, and street characteristics. The steps are as follows: Step 1 (modeling and validation) build and train a model from the available 2017 crowdsourced data (i.e., Strava, Census, and weather) that accurately predicts the cycling traffic data for any street within the study area in 2018; Step 2 (prediction) use the model from Step 1 to predict bicycle traffic in 2019 while assuming new signage was not added; Step 3 (impact evaluation) use the difference in prediction from actual traffic in 2019 as evidence of the likely impact of signage. While our work does not demonstrate causality, it does demonstrate an inexpensive method, using readily-available data, to identify changing trends in bicycling over the same time that new infrastructure investments are being added.

Funder

Nebraska Department of Transportation

Nebraska Tobacco Settlement Biomedical Research Development Funds

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Urban Studies,Geography, Planning and Development,Architecture

Reference77 articles.

1. Abraham JE, McMillan S, Brownlee AT, et al. (2002) Investigation of Cycling Sensitivities. In: Transportation Research Board Annual Conference, Washington, DC, 9–13 January 2022.

2. Support Vector Regression

3. Service quality analysis of signalized intersections from the perspective of bicycling

4. Bicycle Friendly State Report Cards (2019). Available at: https://bikeleague.org/content/state-report-cards.

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