Incident dispatching, clearance and delay.

Auteur(s)
Hall, R.W.
Jaar
Samenvatting

This report models response times and delays for highway incidents, accounting for spacing between interchanges and the time penalty for changing directions, enabling a response vehicle to reach an incident on the opposite side of the highway. A fundamental question in dispatching incident crews is whether to send the closest vehicle that is currently available or to wait for another vehicle to become available that is even closer. Waiting for a closer vehicle is advantageous because service time is effectively reduced, adding to capacity and providing stability at higher levels of utilisation. But waiting for a vehicle to become available adds uncertainty, which contributes to expected traffic delay. As a consequence, any reasonably robust dispatch strategy must provide for a hybridisation of the two objectives, trading-off greater certainty in response time against stability at higher utilisation levels. (Author/publisher)

Publicatie aanvragen

4 + 10 =
Los deze eenvoudige rekenoefening op en voer het resultaat in. Bijvoorbeeld: voor 1+3, voer 4 in.

Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
20020097 ST [electronic version only]
Uitgave

Berkeley, CA, University of California, Institute of Transportation Studies ITS, 2000, IV + 33 p., 19 ref.; California PATH Working Paper ; UCB-ITS-PWP-2000-14 - ISSN 1055-1425

Onze collectie

Deze publicatie behoort tot de overige publicaties die we naast de SWOV-publicaties in onze collectie hebben.