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Biography

Prof.  Xiaolei  Wang
Tongji University,  China

Title: Driver-rider Cost-Sharing Strategies and Equilibria in a Ridesharing Program

Abstract:

The rapid development of smartphone technology has led to the increased popularity of dynamic ridesharing apps used to organize ad hoc ridesharing trips between strangers at short notice. To support such real-time on-demand services, cost-sharing between drivers and riders is commonly centrally determined by ridesharing apps according to prescribed rules. To reveal the impacts of appropriate cost-sharing strategies on the success of ridesharing programs, we models the mode choices of a group of heterogeneous travelers with continuously distributed values of time in a single-corridor network, considering the complex interactions between travelers’ mode choices and the attractiveness of ridesharing in terms of rider/driver waiting/detouring times and matching probabilities. The equilibrium state under any given cost-sharing strategy is described by a system of variational inequalities, based on which the existence of equilibria is established. With the proposed modeling framework, various cost-sharing strategies are examined to avoid mode shifts among transit users to autos and/or reduce vehicular traffic in the short run, and the necessary conditions for cost-sharing strategies to sustain participation and/or reduce vehicle usage are explicitly provided. It is shown that when driving alone is faster but more expensive than public transit, no cost-sharing strategy exists to sustain an active ridesharing platform without inducing transit users to join the ridesharing program. Moreover, the existence of cost-sharing strategies capable of reducing vehicular traffic on the road is not always guaranteed, depending on the costs of driving alone and taking public transit in the considered corridor, fuel prices, and travelers’ prioritization of safety and privacy. Furthermore, it is found that the initial state with no ridesharing participants is an equilibrium under any cost-sharing strategy if the additional cost incurred by a traveler through participating in a ridesharing program is non-negative. This explains the difficulty of initiating a ridesharing program and implies the initial necessity of subsidizing all intended riders and/or drivers to encourage participation.

Biography:

Dr. Xiaolei Wang is currently an associate professor in School of Economics and Management, Tongji University. She received her PhD degree from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Her major research area covers the modeling, analysis and optimization of urban transportation systems in the mobile internet era. Her primary research efforts in recent years are put on modeling travelers’ behavior and improving the urban transportation system with on-demand/shared mobility services. She has published 16 papers in SCI/SSCI indexed journals, with 8 of them appeared in the two top journals in transportation area (i.e., Transportation Science and Transportation Research Part B).

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