2.1 Information Collection
There are two ways to collect information about park-
ing spot availability. Either through infrastructure, or
through crowd sourcing.
Existing infrastructure can be used such as park-
ing meters (Caliskan et al., 2007) (Nawaz et al., 2013)
However using parking meters does not provide accu-
rate results, as in the case of the prepaid meters, usu-
ally the meters are overpaid and indicate occupancy
even when the car has left. On the other hand a mo-
bile phone based parking payment system can signal
the start and the end of the parking really accurately,
but lacks information about the position of the park-
ing car. Furthermore local residents may be entitled
to free parking, hence their parking events are not reg-
istered by any parking meters.
More accurate are the dedicated devices, like sen-
sors built into the road (Kessler, 2011), (Dohler et al.,
2011), or ultrasonic sensors in parking lots. These
devices provide exact measurements at a high instal-
lation and maintenance cost, an investment that local
authorities often choose not to make.
The other approach is to leverage user’s resources
and crowdsource the task of free spot detection.
Crowdsourcing can either rely on user input, or smart-
phone sensors (Chen et al., 2013). When drivers and
pedestrians are tasked to report parking spots, user
motivation becomes an important aspect. Compensat-
ing users for their input may lead to falsely reported
spots. On the other hand not providing external in-
centives results in freeriding that will reduce the per-
formance of the system. (Lan and Wang, 2013)
Cameras and radars can detect parking spots pass-
ing by them, but require special mounts or external
equipment. They also have a high error rate. Activity
sensors are more accurate, but can only detect parking
actions performed by the participating users (Lan and
Shih, 2014). Many solutions are based on different
types of sensors from gyroscopes through GPS posi-
tioning to WiFi signal strength analysis (Nawaz et al.,
2013), but all suffer from the same problem: when
application penetration is low, data about free parking
spaces will be sparse, and usability will be limited.
2.2 Information Processing
Information about an individual parking spot’s avail-
ability has a short expiration date. In frequented areas
parking spots do not last a minute, systems can only
work if future openings are predicted. The only accu-
rate way of predicting the opening of a parking spot
so far is through tracking the driver (Lan and Shih,
2014). When parking spot information is aggregated,
predictions can be made with more certainty from his-
torical measurements.
2.3 Information Dissemination
Information can be displayed to the users publicly or
personally. Moreover, personalized information can
be free or for sale.
In traditional Parking Information Systems (PIS)
roadside boards display the number of free spaces in
the parking lot or area. These systems have been ex-
tended with mobile applications that deliver the same
information to every user.
Many research work have the conclusion that PIS
are not effective, moreover in areas where there is a
shortage in parking spots, they cause severe traffic
jams, when drivers try to get to the last places. This
realization focused research efforts on matching users
to parking spots, displaying the information of only a
single parking spot to each user. Wang, using simula-
tion (Wang and He, 2011) proves that the time needed
to park is shorter in the case of reserved parking than
it is with PGI systems.
Besides the great amount of research work there
are several smart phone applications aiming to solve
the parking problem. Most of these applications
failed and are already discontinued. Open Spot form
Google (Kincaid, 2010) is an often mentioned exam-
ple. While supported by Google, Open Spot ended
up closing because the users were not collaborative
enough and did not help others with signaling of the
free parking spots. The TakeMySpot application fol-
lowed the same path and suffered the same fate.
Despite the failures, newer and newer applica-
tions arise trying to establish themselves in the mar-
ket. Many have simpler functionality, just displaying
prices, zones, parking lots and not providing guidance
or real time information. Such applications are Best-
Parking or Parkopedia, covering many cities world-
wide.
3 THE ParkingRoutes SOLUTION
Investigating the recent works in the field shows that
the current solutions are all based on the concept of
acquiring information of open spots. This information
is than either displayed publicly, or delivered to the
most suitable or highest bidding user. These works
address many aspects of the problem, starting from
the sensing of free spots to handling freeriding and
predicting the effect of low application penetration.
Even the definition of a parking spot raises research
questions.
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