A Two-level Agent-Based Model for Hurricane Evacuation in New Orleans
Authored by Wei Liang, Nina S -N Lam, Xiaojun Qin, Wenxue Ju
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1515/jhsem-2014-0057
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
VISSIM
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Mass evacuation of urban areas due to hurricanes is a critical problem
in emergency management that requires extensive basic and applied
research. Previous research uses agent-based models to simulate
individual vehicle and driver behavior, and is limited mostly to a small
study area due to the complexity of the models and the computational
time needed. To better understand evacuation behavior, simulating the
evacuation traffic in a larger region is needed. This paper develops a
two-level regional disaster evacuation model by coupling two agent-based
models. The first model uses each census block centroid, weighted with
its corresponding number of vehicles, as an agent to simulate the local
road network traffic. The second model, developed on the platform of a
commercial software program called VISSIM, treats each vehicle as an
agent to simulate the interstate highway traffic. This two-level
agent-based model was used to simulate hurricane evacuation traffic in
New Orleans. Validation results with the real Hurricane Katrina's
evacuation data confirm that the proposed model performs well in terms
of high model accuracy (i.e., close agreement between the real and
simulated traffic patterns) and short model running time. The modeling
results show that the average root-mean-square error (RMSE) for the
three major evacuation directions was 347.58. Under a simultaneous
evacuation strategy, and with 240,251 vehicles in 17,744 agents (census
blocks), it would take at least 46.3 hours to evacuate all residents
from the New Orleans metropolitan area. This two-level modeling approach
could serve as a practical tool for evaluating mass evacuation
strategies in New Orleans and other similar urban areas.
Tags
networks
Microsimulation
Urban
Microscopic traffic simulation
Interface