published journal article

A transactions choice model for forecasting demand for alternative-fuel vehicles

Research in Transportation Economics

Publication Date

January 1, 1996

Author(s)

Suggested Citation
David Brownstone, David S. Bunch, Thomas F. Golob and Weiping Ren (1996) “A transactions choice model for forecasting demand for alternative-fuel vehicles”, Research in Transportation Economics, 4, pp. 87–129. Available at: 10.1016/S0739-8859(96)80007-2.

presentation

Electric Vehicles in Urban Goods Delivery Fleets: How Far Can They Go?

Suggested Citation
Michael Hyland (2023) “Electric Vehicles in Urban Goods Delivery Fleets: How Far Can They Go?”. Inha University BK21 Lecture Series, 26 September.

Phd Dissertation

Integration of Locational Decisions with the Household Activity Pattern Problem and Its Applications in Transportation Sustainability

Abstract

This dissertation focuses on the integration of the Household Activity Pattern Problem (HAPP) with various locational decisions considering both supply and demand sides. We present several methods to merge these two distinct areas–transportation infrastructure and travel demand procedures–into an integrated framework that has been previously exogenously linked by feedback or equilibrium processes. From the demand side, travel demand for non-primary activities is derived from the destination choices that a traveler makes that minimizes travel disutility within the context of considerations of daily scheduling and routing. From the supply side, the network decisions are determined as an integral function of travel demand rather than a given fixed OD matrix. First, the Location Selection Problem for the Household Activity Pattern Problem (LSP-HAPP) is developed. LSP-HAPP extends the HAPP by adding the capability to make destination choices simultaneously with other travel decisions of household activity allocation, activity sequence, and departure time. Instead of giving a set of pre-fixed activity locations to visit, LSP-HAPP chooses the location for certain activity types given a set of candidate locations. A dynamic programming algorithm is adopted and further developed for LSP-HAPP in order to deal with the choices among a sizable number of candidate locations within the HAPP modeling structure. Potential applications of synthetic pattern generation based on LSP-HAPP formulation are also presented. Second, the Location – Household Activity Pattern Problem (Location-HAPP), a facility location problem with full-day scheduling and routing considerations is developed. This is in the category of Location-Routing Problems (LRPs), where the decisions of facility location models are influenced by possible vehicle routings. Location-HAPP takes the set covering model as a location strategy, and HAPP as the scheduling and routing tool. The proposed formulation isolates each vehicle’s routing problem from those of other vehicles and from the master set covering problem. A modified column generation that uses a search method to find a column with a negative reduced price is proposed. Third, the Network Design Problem is integrated with the Household Activity Pattern Problem (NDP-HAPP) as a bilevel optimization problem. The bilevel structure includes an upper level network design while the lower level includes a set of disaggregate household itinerary optimization problems, posed as HAPP or LSP-HAPP. The output of upper level NDP (level-of-service of the transportation network) becomes input data for the lower level HAPP that generates travel demand which becomes the input for the NDP. This is advantageous over the conventional NDP that outputs the best set of links to invest in, given an assumed OD matrix. Because the proposed NDP-HAPP can output the same best set of links, a new OD matrix and a detailed temporal distribution of activity participation and travel are created. A decomposed heuristic solution algorithm that represents each decision makers’ rationale shows optimality gaps of as much as 5% compared to exact solutions when tested with small examples. Utilizing the aforementioned models, two transportation sustainability studies are then conducted for the adoption of Alternative Fuel Vehicles (AFVs). The challenges in adopting AFVs are directly related to the transportation infrastructure problems since the initial AFV refueling locations will need to provide comparable convenient travel experience for the early adopters when compared to the already matured gasoline fuel based transportation infrastructure. This work demonstrates the significance of the integration between travel demand model and infrastructure problems, but also draws insightful policy measurements regarding AFV adoption. The first application study attempts to measure the household inconvenience level of operating AFVs. Two different scenarios are examined from two behavioral assumptions – keeping currently reported pattern and minimizing the inconvenience cost through HAPPR or HAPPC. From these patterns, the personal or household inconvenience level is derived as compared to the original pattern, providing quantified data on how the public sector would compensate for the increases in travel disutility to ultimately encourage the attractiveness of AFVs. From the supply side of the AFV infrastructure, Location-HAPP is applied to the incubation of the minimum refueling infrastructure required to support early adoption of Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles (HFCVs). One of the early adoption communities targeted by auto manufacturers is chosen as the study area, and then three different values of accessibility are tested and measured in terms of tolerances to added travel time. Under optimal conditions, refueling trips are found to be toured with other activities. More importantly, there is evidence that excluding such vehicle-infrastructure interactions as well as routing and scheduling interactions can result in over-estimation of minimum facility requirement.

Suggested Citation
Jee Eun Kang (2013) Integration of Locational Decisions with the Household Activity Pattern Problem and Its Applications in Transportation Sustainability. Ph.D.. University of California, Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/u4evf/cdi_bjzhongke_primary_AAI3592017 (Accessed: October 13, 2023).

published journal article

The trip chaining activity of Sydney residents: A cross-section assessment by age group with a focus on seniors

Journal of Transport Geography

Publication Date

July 1, 2007

Author(s)

Thomas Golob, David A. Hensher

Abstract

In this paper, we use a pooled (2002-2004) cross-section of the Sydney travel survey, an annual continuous survey since 1997, to investigate the current profile of trip chaining travel activity of individuals in five-year groups, with a particular focus on those over 64 years old (i.e., seniors), given the aging of the population. Multiple correspondence analysis is used to establish causality of nonlinear and non-monotonic relationships between socioeconomic descriptors and measures of travel behavior (assessed as trip chains). A benchmark setting for today not only establishes the way in which the elderly currently `cope’ with the existing supply network and the available modal alternatives, given their needs, but also is useful in providing hints as to what might be the key emerging transport policy and planning challenges in the future to serve this growing and increasingly influential population sub-strata. The main policy finding is that after age 64, travel demand shifts from car driving (partly linked to loss of driving license, but partly through choice), to car passenger and then to public transport in complex trip chains, especially for singles and for all women.

Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob and David A. Hensher (2007) “The trip chaining activity of Sydney residents: A cross-section assessment by age group with a focus on seniors”, Journal of Transport Geography, 15(4), pp. 298–312. Available at: 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2006.09.005.

published journal article

Using Section 15 Data: Adapting and Evaluating the Magnetic Tape Version for Statistical Analysis

Transportation Research Record

Publication Date

December 1, 1983

Author(s)

Suggested Citation
Gordon Fielding, Mary Brenner and Olivia de la Rocha (1983) “Using Section 15 Data: Adapting and Evaluating the Magnetic Tape Version for Statistical Analysis”, Transportation Research Record [Preprint], (961). Available at: https://onlinepubs.trb.org/Onlinepubs/trr/1984/961/961.pdf.

conference paper

Improving urban multi-modal transport system through congestion pricing and bus fleet sizing: Bi-modal network fundamental diagram modeling approach

Proceedings of the 99th annual meeting of the transportation research board

Publication Date

January 1, 2020
Suggested Citation
Irene Martinez, Michael Hyland and Wenlong Jin (2020) “Improving urban multi-modal transport system through congestion pricing and bus fleet sizing: Bi-modal network fundamental diagram modeling approach”, in Proceedings of the 99th annual meeting of the transportation research board.

working paper

A Bridge between Travel Demand Modeling and Activity-Based Travel Analysis

Publication Date

December 1, 2000

Author(s)

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-00-11, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-00-11, UCTC 446

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

The focus of this paper is on the demonstration that some rather well-known network based formulations in operations research, that have heretofore largely gone unnoticed in activity-based travel research, offer a potentially powerful technique for advancing the general development of the activity-based modeling approach. These formulations can provide an analytical framework that unifies the complex interactions among the resource allocation decisions made by households in conducting their daily affairs outside the home, while preserving the utility-maximizing principles presumed to guide such decisions. A mathematical programming formulation is developed and used to identify the similarities and differences between traditional trip-based modeling methodologies and those pertaining to an activity-based approach. It is demonstrated that the two approaches are directly related.

Suggested Citation
Will Recker (2000) A Bridge between Travel Demand Modeling and Activity-Based Travel Analysis. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-00-11, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-00-11, UCTC 446. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5br4g7rd.