2007 Proceedings of the Ninth Workshop on Algorithm Engineering and Experiments (ALENEX) 2007
DOI: 10.1137/1.9781611972870.5
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In Transit to Constant Time Shortest-Path Queries in Road Networks

Abstract: When you drive to somewhere 'far away', you will leave your current location via one of only a few 'important' traffic junctions. Starting from this informal observation, we develop an algorithmic approach-transit node routingthat allows us to reduce quickest-path queries in road networks to a small number of table lookups. We present two implementations of this idea, one based on a simple grid data structure and one based on highway hierarchies. For the road map of the United States, our best query times impr… Show more

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Cited by 149 publications
(111 citation statements)
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“…Independently, three approaches proved successful for selecting transit nodes: separators [51,15], border nodes of a partition [3,4,2], and nodes categorized as important by other speedup techniques [3,4,61]. It turns out that for route planning in road networks, the latter approach is the most promising one.…”
Section: Highway-node Routing (Hnr)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Independently, three approaches proved successful for selecting transit nodes: separators [51,15], border nodes of a partition [3,4,2], and nodes categorized as important by other speedup techniques [3,4,61]. It turns out that for route planning in road networks, the latter approach is the most promising one.…”
Section: Highway-node Routing (Hnr)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(The original implementation cannot directly measure this because it has large overheads for disk access and parsing of XML-data). Independently, transit-node routing was developed [3], that lifts the speedup to six orders of magnitude and completely replaces Dijkstra-like search by table lookups. This approach was further accelerated by combining transit nodes with edge flags [8], yielding speedups of over 3 millions.…”
Section: Chronological Summary -The Horse Racementioning
confidence: 99%
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