A novel crowdsourcing model for micro-mobility ride-sharing systems

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Abstract

Substantial research is required to ensure that micro-mobility ride sharing provides a bet-ter fulfilment of user needs. This study proposes a novel crowdsourcing model for the ride-sharing system where light vehicles such as scooters and bikes are crowdsourced. The proposed model is expected to solve the problem of charging and maintaining a large number of light vehicles where these efforts will be the responsibility of the crowd of suppliers. The proposed model consists of three entities: suppliers, customers, and a management party responsible for receiving, renting, booking, and demand matching with offered resources. It can allow suppliers to define the location of their private e-scooters/e-bikes and the period of time they are available for rent. Using a dataset of over 9 million e-scooter trips in Austin, Texas, we ran an agent-based simulation six times using three maximum battery ranges (i.e., 35, 45, and 60 km) and different numbers of e-scooters (e.g., 50 and 100) at each origin. Computational results show that the proposed model is promising and might be advantageous to shift the charging and maintenance efforts to a crowd of suppliers.

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APA

Elhenawy, M., Komol, M. R., Masoud, M., Liu, S., Ashqar, H. I., Almannaa, M. H., … Rakotonirainy, A. (2021). A novel crowdsourcing model for micro-mobility ride-sharing systems. Sensors, 21(14). https://doi.org/10.3390/s21144636

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