The problem of cyclic flows in traffic assignment
Bruce N. Janson and
Carlos Zozaya-Gorostiza
Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, 1987, vol. 21, issue 4, 299-310
Abstract:
A fundamental property of traffic assignment is that cyclic flows from a common origin or to a common destination cannot exist in an equilibrium solution. However, cyclic flows can easily be created by the Frank-Wolfe (F-W) assignment procedure, especially during its first several iterations. The PARTAN technique--a more rapidly converging derivative of the F-W method--can also create cyclic flows during its procedure. We show in this paper that once cyclic flows become part of a combined assignment, they are difficult to correct, thus presenting one impediment to convergence. We then present modifications to the F-W and PARTAN procedures that prevent cyclic flows from being created between adjacent pairs of nodes. The avoidance of cyclic flows in test problems is shown to accelerate the convergence of both the F-W and PARTAN techniques, particularly in the first several iterations. While the impossibility of cyclic flows in a true equilibrium solution is an important property of traffic assignment, this paper shows that (1) the F-W and PARTAN procedures eventually reduce cyclic flows to zero if they occur, (2) avoiding cyclic flows can be most helpful in the early iterations of these procedures, and (3) avoiding cyclic flows in large networks is very difficult because of large computational requirements.
Date: 1987
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