Sharing the fares

Monday, March 6, 2017 - 05:02 in Psychology & Sociology

A newly published study co-authored by MIT researchers suggests that urban ride-sharing is feasible in a wide variety of cities around the globe — and indeed that the potential “shareability” of autos in those places is more similar, from place to place, than previously expected. The work builds on a 2014 study showing that ride-sharing — in the form of, say, taxi trips shared with other passengers traveling along similar routes — could be highly effective in New York City. However, given New York’s exceptional population density, an ongoing question is how many other urban settings offer the same potential for sharing vehicles. The new study examines data from San Francisco, Singapore, and Vienna, in addition to New York. It suggests the ride-sharing potential in those cities converges so closely that, as the study authors write, “they all obey the same empirical law governing the potential for ride-sharing.” “We found this kind of...

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