4.7 Article

Does bus bunching happen inevitably: The counteraction between link and stop headway deviations?

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trc.2022.103828

Keywords

Bus transit; Service reliability; Bus bunching; Headway deviation; Counteraction

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71701159, 72001162]

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Bus bunching, which leads to excessive waiting time for passengers and undermines bus service reliability, is mainly caused by bus headway deviations. Contrary to theoretical expectations, empirical data shows that bus bunching occurs at a considerably lower frequency. This study reveals that the counteraction between headway deviations on links and at stops constrains the occurrence of bus bunching, indicating the self-repair ability of the bus system to resist disruptions.
Bus headway deviations are the major causes of bus bunching, which is detrimental to bus service reliability and leads to excessive waiting time for passengers. Generally, it is believed that bus bunching is an inevitable result once a service disturbance occurs, as long as the route is long enough. However, in this study, it goes as low as 5% of all trips from the empirical data, con-tradicting the expectation in theory. This study explores the underlying reasons for this contra-diction based on empirical data from two representative bus routes in China. The results show that headway deviations on links and at stops mostly counteract with each other, constraining the occurrence of bus bunching. Under this counteraction effect, the path headway deviations remain within a stable range, normally bounded by the planned headway. It indicates that the bus system has a self-repair ability to resist headway disruptions, which explains why bus bunching happens at a considerably lower frequency in practice than in theory. We further discuss how the coun-teraction effect works. The insights gained from this study can shed light on preventing bus bunching and generating new ways to recover bus service regularity after a headway disruption. If we can adequately adjust the control methods to make the link and stop headway deviations counteract with each other, the bus system can automatically mitigate the headway deviations.

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