Using National Survey Respondents as Consumers in an Agent-Based Model of Plug-In Hybrid Vehicle Adoption
Authored by Margaret J Eppstein, Donna M Rizzo, Brian H Y Lee, Joseph S Krupa, Narine Manukyan
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1109/access.2015.2427252
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Abstract
Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) offer the potential to
significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, if vehicle consumers are
willing to adopt this new technology. Consequently, there is much
interest in exploring PHEV market penetration models. In prior work, we
developed an agent-based model (ABM) of potential PHEV consumer adoption
that incorporated several spatial, social, and media influences to
identify nonlinear interactions among potential leverage points that may
impact PHEV market penetration. In developing that model, the need for
additional data to properly inform both the decision making rules and
agent initialization became apparent. To address these issues, we
recently conducted and analyzed an extensive consumer survey; in this
paper, we modify the ABM to reflect the survey findings. A unique aspect
is a one-to-one correspondence between agents in the model and survey
respondents, and thus yielding distributions and cross correlations in
agent attributes that accurately reflect the survey population. We also
implement a used-PHEV market, and allow agents to purchase new or used
compact PHEVs or vehicles of their current type. Based on our prior
survey response analysis, our modified model includes a PHEV-technology
threshold component, a multinomial logistic prediction of willingness to
consider a compact PHEV based on dynamically changing attitudes, and
agent-specific delay discounting functions that predict the amount
agents are willing to pay up front for greater fuel savings. We thus
independently account for agents' discomfort with the new PHEV
technology, their desire to drive a more environmentally friendly
vehicle, and their willingness to pay a higher sticker price for a PHEV.
Results of ten survey-based ABM scenarios are reported with implications
for policy-makers and manufacturers. We believe close integration of the
design of consumer surveys and the development of ABMs is a key step in
developing useful decision-support models; this paper serves as an
example of one way to achieve that.
Tags
Evolution
Uncertainty
networks
diffusion
electric vehicles
Market penetration
Amazons mechanical turk
Choice
analysis
Energy-sources
Ghg emissions