Simulation of bi-direction pedestrian movement using a cellular automata model
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1867887
DOI10.1016/S0378-4371(02)01732-6zbMath1011.90011MaRDI QIDQ1867887
Weicheng Fan, Weifeng Fang, Lizhong Yang
Publication date: 2 April 2003
Published in: Physica A (Search for Journal in Brave)
Traffic problems in operations research (90B20) Neural nets applied to problems in time-dependent statistical mechanics (82C32)
Related Items
Multiple-vehicle collision induced by a sudden stop in traffic flow ⋮ Crowd of individuals walking in opposite directions. A toy model to study the segregation of the group into lanes of individuals moving in the same direction ⋮ Simulations of bi-direction pedestrian flow using kinetic Monte Carlo methods ⋮ Modified circle map model for complex motion induced by a change of shuttle buses ⋮ Cellular automaton model of crowd evacuation inspired by slime mould ⋮ A force-driven model for passenger evacuation in bus fires ⋮ Pedestrian walking behavior revealed through a random walk model ⋮ Simulating evacuations with obstacles using a modified dynamic cellular automata model ⋮ SELF-AFFINITY OF VEHICLE DEMAND ON THE FERRY-BOAT SYSTEM ⋮ A mathematical model of the formation of lanes in crowds of pedestrians moving in opposite directions ⋮ Particles Moving Around a Two-Lane Circular Track in Both Directions. Avoiding Collisions Leads to Self-Organization ⋮ Study on the collision dynamics and the transmission pattern between pedestrians along the queue ⋮ Schedule and complex motion of shuttle bus induced by periodic inflow of passengers ⋮ A Cellular Automaton Model for Crowd Evacuation and Its Auto-Defined Obstacle Avoidance Attribute ⋮ Field based model for pedestrian dynamics
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Statistical physics of traffic flow
- Jamming transition of pedestrian traffic at a crossing with open boundaries
- Scaling behavior of crowd flow outside a hall
- Scaling of pedestrian channel flow with a bottleneck
- Simulation of pedestrian dynamics using a two-dimensional cellular automaton