AGENT-BASED MODELING OF UP DILIMAN INTRACAMPUS PEDESTRIAN MOBILITY USING NETLOGO AND GIS
Keywords: ABM, Deterministic, MNL Regression, Pedestrian Density, Shortest Route Network, Student Schedule
Abstract. In the Philippines, campus mobility studies remain underexplored. Since small-scale models help in policy making that may also be applied in a large spatiotemporal context, intracampus mobility modeling and simulation offer support for future mobility research. In this study, we designed a NetLogo model to apply ABM and GIS in understanding intracampus student pedestrian mobility. We created a deterministic model using discrete student schedule and a probabilistic model using the multinomial logistic (MNL) regression model derived from the student demographics data to analyze student movement. To provide a realistic representation of student pedestrians and campus environment, GIS spatiotemporal data was proven crucial to the pedestrian mobility models. The generated pedestrian count heatmaps show a significant increase in student count from online learning switching to face–to–face instruction. The overall campus building occupancy served as the key factor influencing the changes in agent behaviors such as walking speed and student tardiness. Moreover, the probabilistic model showed erratic movements of students. The model evaluation depends on the heavily imbalanced datasets and its multiclass nature with relatively higher model performance (F1 score > 0.8) is observed during morning, noon, and end schedule times, whereas suboptimal performance (F1 score < 0.6) where the dataset has a higher number of classes. The simulations demonstrate that ABM is a useful tool for examining pedestrian and transport patterns and can be enhanced further to allow multimodal and multiagent systems.