Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1131793 | Transportation Research Part B: Methodological | 2015 | 12 Pages |
•Identify deficiencies of single-regime models for congested states.•Weighted least square method addressing biased selection bias.•Single-regime models for both free-flow and congested states.•Theoretical investigation and extensive applications.
The speed-density or flow-density relationship has been considered as the foundation of traffic flow theory. Existing single-regime models calibrated by the least square method (LSM) could not fit the empirical data consistently well both in light-traffic/free-flow conditions and congested/jam conditions. In this paper, first, we point out that the inaccuracy of single-regime models is not caused solely by their functional forms, but also by the sample selection bias. Second, we apply a weighted least square method (WLSM) that addresses the sample selection bias problem. The calibration results for six well-known single-regime models using the WLSM fit the empirical data reasonably well both in light-traffic/free-flow conditions and congested/jam conditions. Third, we conduct a theoretical investigation that reveals the deficiency associated with the LSM is because the expected value of speed (or a function of it) is nonlinear with regard to the density (or a function of it).