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Journal Article

Citation

Colombi A, Scianna M. R. Soc. Open Sci. 2017; 4(3): e160561.

Affiliation

Department of Mathematical Sciences , Politecnico di Torino , Corso Duca degli Abruzzi 24, 10129 Torino, Italy.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Royal Society Publishing)

DOI

10.1098/rsos.160561

PMID

28405352

PMCID

PMC5383809

Abstract

In this paper, we present a hybrid mathematical model describing crowd dynamics. More specifically, our approach is based on the well-established Helbing-like discrete model, where each pedestrian is individually represented as a dimensionless point and set to move in order to reach a target destination, with deviations deriving from both physical and social forces. In particular, physical forces account for interpersonal collisions, whereas social components include the individual desire to remain sufficiently far from other walkers (the so-called territorial effect). In this respect, the repulsive behaviour of pedestrians is here set to be different from traditional Helbing-like methods, as it is assumed to be largely determined by how they perceive the presence and the position of neighbouring individuals, i.e. either objectively as pointwise/localized entities or subjectively as spatially distributed masses. The resulting modelling environment is then applied to specific scenarios, that first reproduce a real-world experiment, specifically designed to derive our model hypothesis. Sets of numerical realizations are also run to analyse in more details the pedestrian paths resulting from different types of perception of small groups of static individuals. Finally, analytical investigations formalize and validate from a mathematical point of view selected simulation outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

human perception; localized versus distributed perception; pedestrian dynamics; repulsive behaviour; social force model

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