Slugging: Casual Carpooling for Urban Transit
Published Online:4 Aug 2021https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2021.0988
References
- (2021) Business models in the sharing economy: Manufacturing durable goods in the presence of peer-to-peer rental markets. Inform. Systems Res. Forthcoming.Google Scholar
- (2018) Ride-hailing networks with strategic drivers: The impact of platform control capabilities on performance. Rotman School of Management Working Paper, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.Google Scholar
- (2014) Electric vehicles with a battery switching station: Adoption and environmental impact. Management Sci. 61(4):772–794.Link, Google Scholar
- (2019) Coordinating supply and demand on an on-demand service platform with impatient customers. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 21(3):556–570.Link, Google Scholar
- (2017) The car sharing economy: Interaction of business model choice and product line design. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 19(2):185–201.Link, Google Scholar
- (2020) Operations management in the age of the sharing economy: What is old and what is new? Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 22(1):93–101.Link, Google Scholar
- (2021) Labor welfare in on-demand service platforms. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management, ePub ahead of print April 6, https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2020.0964.Link, Google Scholar
- (2018) Peer-to-peer product sharing: Implications for ownership, usage, and social welfare in the sharing economy. Management Sci. 65(2):477–493.Link, Google Scholar
- (1990) Casual carpooling in the San Francisco Bay area. Transportation Quart. 44(1):133–150.Google Scholar
- (2019) Spatial pricing in ride-sharing networks. Oper. Res. 67(3):744–769.Link, Google Scholar
- (1968) Über ein paradoxon aus der verkehrsplanung. Unternehmensforschung 12(1):258–268.Google Scholar
- (2006) Slugging in Houston—casual carpool passenger characteristics. J. Public Transportation 9(5):23–40.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2017) The role of surge pricing on a service platform with self-scheduling capacity. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 19(3):368–384.Link, Google Scholar
- CBS (2008) “Slugging” in San Francisco. CBS (May 12), https://www.cbsnews.com/news/slugging-in-san-francisco/.Google Scholar
- (2020) We are on the way: Analysis of on-demand ride-hailing systems. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management, ePub ahead of print June 3, https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2020.0880.Link, Google Scholar
- Forbes (2016) A practically free alternative to Uber and Lyft you are missing out on. Forbes (March 10), https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewbender/2016/03/10/a-practically-free-alternative-to-uber-and-lyft-you-are-missing-out-on/.Google Scholar
- (2018) A modeling approach for matching ridesharing trips within macroscopic travel demand models. Transportation 45(6):1639–1653.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2013) Ridesharing: The state-of-the-art and future directions. Transportation Res. Part B: Methodological 57:28–46.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2019) Your Uber is arriving: Managing on-demand workers through surge pricing, forecast communication, and worker incentives. Management Sci. 65(5):1995–2014.Abstract, Google Scholar
- (2020) Smart city operations: Modelling challenges and opportunities. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 22(1):203–213.Link, Google Scholar
- (2020) Robust repositioning for vehicle sharing. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 22(2):241–256.Link, Google Scholar
- (2017) Service region design for urban electric vehicle sharing systems. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 19(2):309–327.Link, Google Scholar
- (2019) Sharing Economy: Making Supply Meet Demand (Springer, Berlin).Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2021) Dynamic type matching. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management, ePub ahead of print March 18, https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2020.0952.Link, Google Scholar
- (2021) Surge pricing and two-sided temporal responses in ride-hailing. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management, ePub ahead of print February 3, https://doi.org/10.1287/msom.2020.0960.Link, Google Scholar
- (2021) Ride solo or pool: Designing price-service menus for a ride-sharing platform. Eur. J. Oper. Res., ePub ahead of print April 7, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2021.03.058.Google Scholar
- (2016) Collaborative consumption: Strategic and economic implications of product sharing. Management Sci. 64(3):1171–1188.Link, Google Scholar
- (2020) Bike-share systems: Accessibility and availability. Management Sci. 66(9):3803–3824.Link, Google Scholar
- (2007) Casual carpooling-enhanced. J. Public Transportation 10(4):119–130.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1999) Slugging: The Commuting Alternative for Washington (Forel Publishing, Washington, DC).Google Scholar
- (2001) Organized dynamic ride sharing: The potential environmental benefits and the opportunity for advancing the concept. Transportation Res. Board 2001 Annual Meeting, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
- (2014) Toward mass adoption of electric vehicles: Impact of the range and resale anxieties. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 17(1):101–119.Link, Google Scholar
- (2020) On-time last-mile delivery: Order assignment with travel-time predictors. Management Sci., ePub ahead of print November 3, https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2020.3741.Google Scholar
- (2015) Diffusion models for double-ended queues with renewal arrival processes. Stochastic Systems 5(1):1–61.Link, Google Scholar
- (2017) Optimizing the profitability and quality of service in carshare systems under demand uncertainty. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 20(2):162–180.Link, Google Scholar
- (2011) The social context of informal commuting: Slugs, strangers and structuration. Transportation Res. Part A: Policy Practice 45(4):258–268.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2012) Would you ever be a slug? Accessed July 1, 2019, https://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2012/07/would-you-ever-be-a-slug.html.Google Scholar
- New York Times (2003) To commute to capital, early bird gets ‘slugs.’ (April 29), https://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/29/us/to-commute-to-capital-early-bird-gets-slugs.html.Google Scholar
- NPR (2008) Slugging to work: Anonymous ride-sharing. (May 22), https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=90700559.Google Scholar
- (2017) Dynamic ridesharing. Batta R, Peng J, eds. Leading Developments from INFORMS Communities, INFORMS TutORials in Operations Research (INFORMS, Catonsville, MD), 212–236.Abstract, Google Scholar
- (2019) A smart-city scope of operations management. Production Oper. Management 28(2):393–406.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) Shared mobility for last-mile delivery: Design, operational prescriptions, and environmental impact. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 20(4):737–751.Link, Google Scholar
- (2002) How bad is selfish routing? J. ACM 49(2):236–259.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1994) Convergence to efficiency in a simple market with incomplete information. Econometrica 62(5):1041–1063.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2016) Casual carpooling in the San Francisco Bay area: Understanding user characteristics, behaviors, and motivations. Transportation Policy 51:165–173.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2013) Models for effective deployment and redistribution of bicycles within public bicycle-sharing systems. Oper. Res. 61(6):1346–1359.Link, Google Scholar
- (2018) Here are 5 new infrastructure projects we’ll likely get with Amazon. Accessed July 1, 2019, https://ggwash.org/view/69866/crystal-city-national-landing-virginia-new-infrastructure-get-amazon.Google Scholar
- (2000) Mating habits of slugs: Dynamic carpool formation in the I-95/I-395 corridor of northern virginia. Transportation Res. Record 1711(1):31–38.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1983) The prevalence of Braess’ paradox. Transportation Sci. 17(3):301–318.Link, Google Scholar
- (2018) On-demand service platforms. Manufacturing Service Oper. Management 20(4):704–720.Link, Google Scholar
- Wall Street Journal (2019) Price of good economy: More time stuck in traffic. (August 22), https://www.wsj.com/amp/articles/price-of-good-economy-more-time-stuck-in-traffic-11566466206.Google Scholar
- WAMU (2017) Virtual slugging: Can Uber modernize a D.C. tradition? (March 28), https://wamu.org/story/17/03/28/virtual-slugging-can-uber-modernize-d-c-tradition/.Google Scholar
- (2016) A pickup and delivery problem for ridesharing considering congestion. Transportation Lett. 8(5):259–269.Google Scholar
- (2018) Tipping point in ride-hailing service systems with sharing option. Nanyang Business School Working Paper, Singapore.Google Scholar
- Washingtonian (2016) Why you should be slugging to work (for free) instead of paying for Uber pool. (January 13), https://www.washingtonian.com/2016/01/13/what-is-slugging-washington-dc-free-ridesharing/.Google Scholar
- Washington Post (2018) D.C. shrugs at slugging’s benefits. (October 19), https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/dc-shrugs-at-sluggings-benefits/2018/10/19/262426bc-d095-11e8-83d6-291fcead2ab1_story.html.Google Scholar
- (2015) Complementarity models for traffic equilibrium with ridesharing. Transportation Res. Part B: Methodological 81:161–182.Crossref, Google Scholar

