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Article: Wardrop Equilibrium Can Be Boundedly Rational: A New Behavioral Theory of Route Choice

TitleWardrop Equilibrium Can Be Boundedly Rational: A New Behavioral Theory of Route Choice
Authors
Keywordsbounded rationality
day-to-day dynamics
global stability
Wardrop equilibrium
Issue Date2024
Citation
Transportation Science, 2024, v. 58, n. 5, p. 973-994 How to Cite?
AbstractAs one of the most fundamental concepts in transportation science, Wardrop equilibrium (WE) has always had a relatively weak behavioral underpinning. To strengthen this foundation, one must reckon with bounded rationality in human decision-making processes, such as the lack of accurate information, limited computing power, and suboptimal choices. This retreat from behavioral perfectionism in the literature, however, was typically accompanied by a conceptual modification of WE. Here, we show that giving up perfect rationality need not force a departure from WE. On the contrary, WE can be reached with global stability in a routing game played by boundedly rational travelers. We achieve this result by developing a day-to-day (DTD) dynamical model that mimics how travelers gradually adjust their route valuations, hence choice probabilities, based on past experiences. Our model, called cumulative logit (CumLog), resembles the classical DTD models but makes a crucial change; whereas the classical models assume that routes are valued based on the cost averaged over historical data, our model values the routes based on the cost accumulated. To describe route choice behaviors, the CumLog model only uses two parameters, one accounting for the rate at which the future route cost is discounted in the valuation relative to the past ones and the other describing the sensitivity of route choice probabilities to valuation differences. We prove that the CumLog model always converges to WE, regardless of the initial point, as long as the behavioral parameters satisfy certain mild conditions. Our theory thus upholds WE’s role as a benchmark in transportation systems analysis. It also explains why equally good routes at equilibrium may be selected with different probabilities, which solves the instability problem posed by Harsanyi.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/351501
ISSN
2023 Impact Factor: 4.4
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 2.475

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorLi, Jiayang-
dc.contributor.authorWang, Zhaoran-
dc.contributor.authorNie, Yu Marco-
dc.date.accessioned2024-11-20T03:56:46Z-
dc.date.available2024-11-20T03:56:46Z-
dc.date.issued2024-
dc.identifier.citationTransportation Science, 2024, v. 58, n. 5, p. 973-994-
dc.identifier.issn0041-1655-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/351501-
dc.description.abstractAs one of the most fundamental concepts in transportation science, Wardrop equilibrium (WE) has always had a relatively weak behavioral underpinning. To strengthen this foundation, one must reckon with bounded rationality in human decision-making processes, such as the lack of accurate information, limited computing power, and suboptimal choices. This retreat from behavioral perfectionism in the literature, however, was typically accompanied by a conceptual modification of WE. Here, we show that giving up perfect rationality need not force a departure from WE. On the contrary, WE can be reached with global stability in a routing game played by boundedly rational travelers. We achieve this result by developing a day-to-day (DTD) dynamical model that mimics how travelers gradually adjust their route valuations, hence choice probabilities, based on past experiences. Our model, called cumulative logit (CumLog), resembles the classical DTD models but makes a crucial change; whereas the classical models assume that routes are valued based on the cost averaged over historical data, our model values the routes based on the cost accumulated. To describe route choice behaviors, the CumLog model only uses two parameters, one accounting for the rate at which the future route cost is discounted in the valuation relative to the past ones and the other describing the sensitivity of route choice probabilities to valuation differences. We prove that the CumLog model always converges to WE, regardless of the initial point, as long as the behavioral parameters satisfy certain mild conditions. Our theory thus upholds WE’s role as a benchmark in transportation systems analysis. It also explains why equally good routes at equilibrium may be selected with different probabilities, which solves the instability problem posed by Harsanyi.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofTransportation Science-
dc.subjectbounded rationality-
dc.subjectday-to-day dynamics-
dc.subjectglobal stability-
dc.subjectWardrop equilibrium-
dc.titleWardrop Equilibrium Can Be Boundedly Rational: A New Behavioral Theory of Route Choice-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.1287/trsc.2023.0132-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-85205151094-
dc.identifier.volume58-
dc.identifier.issue5-
dc.identifier.spage973-
dc.identifier.epage994-
dc.identifier.eissn1526-5447-

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