For all its colorful frenzied glory, the
Tokyo Metro map isn’t the most complex subway guide in the world.
New York and Paris both have it topped—at least in the eyes of one group of theoretical physicists and mathematicians.
Researchers Riccardo Gallotti and Marc Barthelemy of the CEA-Saclay
in France and Mason Porter of the University of Oxford in the U.K.
recently set out to calculate the maximium transit map information
someone can “reasonably process.”
The goal, they write in
Science Advances,
was to see whether the growth of urban transportation systems has led
to visual guides that “exceed our cognitive limits.” If that’s the case,
then city residents and visitors might soon have to rely on digital
navigation apps less as a crutch than as a necessity.
For its study, the group analyzed maps of the world’s 15 largest metro transit networks, as determined by total stations.
They considered all the trips a traveler could make from Point A to
Point B with two connections, then determined the fastest possible path
for a given trip.
That framework aligned with behavioral research showing that people
can store up to four pieces of information in their working memory at
one time—in this case, a trip’s origin, its destination, and two
transfer stations.
The result was a “cumulative” complexity rating that saw the New York
subway at the head of the pack—earning it the title of the “most
complex metropolitan system in the world”—and Hong Kong’s metro rail
network at the back.
Paris Metro/AlamyA Paris subway platform.
When it comes to information processing, an average person’s
“cognitive threshold” is about 250 connections, or the equivalent of
roughly eight bits of data, according to the researchers.
New York’s system neared that limit, with 161 total connections, and
the most complicated two-transfer trip a person could make on the subway
exceeded it—clocking in at 8.1 bits.
Maps for the Paris Metro (with 78 total connections), Tokyo Metro
(56), and London Tube (48) clustered around six bits of information.
So for the most part, even in major cities, travelers can plan out
fairly complex transit trips using a good old-fashioned metro map
without getting too overwhelmed. But things get a lot harder for our
brains to handle when a second mode is involved.
The researchers found that out quickly when they layered bus data on
top of metro rail routes for the three most complex networks.
The number of total connections a person had to fathom for a
particular subway-bus trip far exceeded standard cognitive
capacity—reaching 8,461 for New York, 4,292 for Paris, and 1,831 for
Tokyo. More than 80 percent of the potential multimodal trips required
travelers to process more than eight bits of information.
Screenshot/YouTubeSubways cars in Hong Kong boast open gangways that reduce crowding.
“This
indeed poses the problem of a useful representation for such multimodal
systems,” the co-author Barthelemy tells CityLab via email.
Multimodal maps are rare, and the problem is really one of bus maps in particular.
They’re just much more complex than subway maps, reflecting the greater scale of city bus networks themselves.
The researchers call for a more “user-friendly way” to present bus
routes, and indeed some designers have advanced the art of the bus
map—using line thickness to denote frequency, for instance, as the
new Muni map does in San Francisco.
The researchers conclude that city travelers face an app-heavy future (citations removed):
Our analysis highlights the fact that
humans need to integrate an excessive amount of information for urban
navigation, and we therefore need to seek new solutions that will help
them navigate in megacities. Redesigning maps and representations of
transportation networks, as well as improving information-technology
tools that help to decrease the amount of information to a level below
the human processing threshold, thus appears to be crucial for an
efficient use of services provided by transportation agencies.
In some ways the work misses the forest for the trees: 5.6 million
people navigate the New York subway system every weekday, and 2.1
million ride the bus, without their heads exploding. But it’s hard to
argue with the pursuit of better maps or smarter navigation technology
to assist city mobility. The less you need to rely on a specific route
you already know from A to B, the more freedom you feel to take transit
anywhere in the city.
Comments
Post a Comment