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Using Geographic Information Systems and the World Wide Web for Interactive Transit Trip Itinerary Planning

Using Geographic Information Systems and the World Wide Web for Interactive Transit Trip Itinerary Planning. Brian Smith Center for Transportation Studies University of Virginia. Presentation Outline. Importance of Transit Information Traditional Approaches Itinerary Planning Functions

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Using Geographic Information Systems and the World Wide Web for Interactive Transit Trip Itinerary Planning

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  1. Using Geographic Information Systems and the World Wide Web for Interactive Transit Trip Itinerary Planning Brian Smith Center for Transportation Studies University of Virginia

  2. Presentation Outline • Importance of Transit Information • Traditional Approaches • Itinerary Planning Functions • Design Case Study • Lessons Learned • Conclusions

  3. Transit Information • Markets the system • Facilitates system use • Information must be: • accessible • easy to use • “attractive” (perceptions)

  4. Route/Schedule Information • Fundamental • Traditional approaches • Printed Brochures • Telephone Service

  5. Printed Brochures • Strengths • Portable • Graphic • Little staff support required • Weaknesses • No itinerary selection support • Static

  6. Telephone Service • Strengths • Interactive • Direct itinerary selection support • Weaknesses • Cost • Availability (geographic and temporal) • No graphics

  7. Trip Itinerary Planning • Relatively complex process • Printed Brochures • Search must be completed by customer • Telephone Service • Verbal results only • Key Decisions • Spatial • Temporal

  8. Spatial Decisions • Determine set of stops accessible from origin • Distance • Impediments • Determine set of stops accessible from destination • What combinations are feasible given route structure?

  9. Temporal Decisions • Multiobjective • Preferred time of departure • Preferred time of arrival • Minimize total trip time • “Special” service adds to complexity • Peak “express” service • Weekend schedules

  10. Problem Formulation Minimimze: Total Trip Time Subject To: Spatial Constraints Temporal Constraints System Constraints

  11. Geographic Information Systems • Tool that supports the processing of spatial data into information. DeMers • Traditionally used for planning applications in public transportation • Key Features • Spatial analysis (buffers, overlays, etc.) • Integration with database management system

  12. World Wide Web • Global information distribution • Unprecedented growth • High degree of interactivity • Flexibility • Graphical user interface

  13. GIS & WWW • Until recently, little to no integration • New products allow the use of the WWW as the “user interface” to GIS • Current applications are relatively simple • Serving static maps • Limited degree of interactivity

  14. Design Case Study -- Pentran • Prototype trip itinerary planner accessible via WWW. • Primary software tools: • VisualBasic • MapObjects (Internet Map Server) • Access • Pentran drove requirements development

  15. Development Approach • Traditional public transportation GIS applications use “scientific discovery” method. • Transit trip itinerary planner required a structured software development approach • Waterfall • Rapid prototyping

  16. Prototype Design • Rapid prototyping • Allows for early determination if software tools support performance requirements • Tangible early results • Study team is nearing the end of the process • Current design document www.people.virginia.edu/~rbs5t/bus/default.htm

  17. Lessons Learned • Detailed design is critical • Database structure importance • Design for maintenance

  18. Design - Origin Input

  19. Prototype - Origin Input

  20. Conclusion • GIS/WWW software can support time-critical public transportation operations applications. • Requires structured software development approach • Potential to provide a very useful trip itinerary planning tool

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