4.7 Article

A tensor-based Bayesian probabilistic model for citywide personalized travel time estimation

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trc.2018.03.004

Keywords

Tensor; CANDECOMP/PARAFAC (CP) factorization; Log-normal distribution; Bayesian treatment; Over-fitting

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [61374195]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  3. Jiangsu Province University Graduate Student Research and Innovation Program [KYLX_0180]
  4. Open Funding of Tongji University Road and Transport Engineering Key Laboratory [TJDDZHCX002]

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Urban travel time information is of great importance for many levels of traffic management and operation. This paper develops a tensor-based Bayesian probabilistic model for citywide and personalized travel time estimation, using the large-scale and sparse GPS trajectories generated by taxicabs. Combined with the knowledge learned from historical trajectories, travel times of different drivers on all road segments in some time slots are modeled with a 3-order tensor. This tensor-based modeling approach incorporates both the spatial correlation between different road segments and the person-specific variation between different drivers, as well as the coarse-grain temporal correlation between recent and historical traffic conditions and the fine-grain temporal correlation between different time slots. To account for the variability caused by the intrinsic uncertainties in urban road network, each travel time entry in the built tensor is treated as a variable following a log-normal distribution. With the help of the fully Bayesian treatment, the model achieves automatic hyper-parameter tuning and model complexity controlling, and therefore the problem of over-fitting is prevented even when the used data is large-scale and sparse. The proposed model is applied to a real case study on the citywide road network of Beijing, China, using the large-scale and sparse GPS trajectories collected from over 32,670 taxicabs for a period of two months. Empirical results of extensive experiments demonstrate that the proposed model provides an effective and robust approach for urban travel time estimation and outperforms the considered competing methods.

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