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Public Transportation and the Carless in Small Cities and Rural Areas: An Annotated Bibliography
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Author(s)
Working Paper
Areas of Expertise
Abstract
This annotated bibliography is prepared for those who are interested in the problem, concerned citizens and planners in small cities and rural areas, and policy analysts in various levels of government. Public transportation planning in nonmetropolitan areas has been disjointed. There are few well developed goals, objectives, and policies. Standards and values are varied among different communities. Consequently, decisions on public transportation services can best be made locally with active citizen participation. This bibliography, together with a review paper (ITS Report D-SR-77-2), provides adequate information for gaining insights into the various facets of the problem. Additional information and assistance can be obtained from the library of the Institute of Transportation Studies (Berkeley and Irvine), the Division of Mass Transportation – California Department of Transportation, the Urban Mass Transportation Administration – U.S. Department of Transportation, and other agencies or institutes. The bibliography is divided into three sections. The first section is a list of references arranged alphabetically by author. Each article is classified by a system of coded keywords. The keyword codes are shown in parentheses after each reference. The second section contains the abstracts of the articles. The third section is an index of articles by subject. The cross-reference is shown by the article number.
Suggested Citation
Tenny M. Lam, Timothy J. Tardiff, Michael J. Uyeno, James P. Dana and Anthony Caruso (1977) Public Transportation and the Carless in Small Cities and Rural Areas: An Annotated Bibliography. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-77-2. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6j25h4xz.published journal article
Measurement characterization and autonomous outlier detection and exclusion for ground vehicle navigation with cellular signals
IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Vehicles
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Author(s)
Suggested Citation
Mahdi Maaref and Zak Zaher M. Kassas (2020) “Measurement characterization and autonomous outlier detection and exclusion for ground vehicle navigation with cellular signals”, IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Vehicles, pp. 1–1. Available at: 10.1109/tiv.2020.2991947.conference paper
Experimenting with a Computerized Self-Administrative Activity Survey: Evaluating a Pilot Study
80th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board January 7-11, 2001
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Associated Project
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Suggested Citation
Ming-Sheng Lee and Michael G. McNally (2000) “Experimenting with a Computerized Self-Administrative Activity Survey: Evaluating a Pilot Study”. 80th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board January 7-11, 2001, Washington, D. C.. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/47f366f3?conferencePaper.Phd Dissertation
A Neuro-Genetic-Based Universally Transferable Freeway Incident Detection Framework
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Abstract
A universal freeway incident detection framework is a task that remains unfulfilled despite the promising approaches that have been recently explored. The need for an operationally successful incident detection and management system as a vital component of any advanced traffic management system, is well established and recognized. Only recently however, researchers and practitioners have begun to increasingly realize that for an incident detection framework to be universally operational and successful, it needs to fulfill all components of a set of recognized needs. It is the objective of this research to define those universality requirements and produce an incident detection framework that possesses the potential to fulfill them. A new potentially universal freeway incident detection framework has been proposed, developed and evaluated. The research effort was started by defining a comprehensive set of requirements that any universal incident detection algorithm or framework should fulfill. Among these requirements, an incident detection algorithm needs to be operationally accurate, automatically transferable, and capable of automatically adapting to changes in the freeway environment. This set of universality requirements was used as a template against which all algorithms within the scope of this study have been evaluated. Three major incident and loop detector databases were heavily utilized, two of which are unprecedented real databases collected from two major freeway sites in California and Minnesota, namely the Alameda County’s I-880 freeway database and the Minneapolis’ I-35W database. The universality of the most well known existing incident detection algorithms was tested using the above databases. Serious lack of the universality, particularly transferability, was detected in all existing algorithms. Prior to the development of the new universal framework, limits on acceptable performance were elicited from TMC surveys conducted as part of this effort. Preliminary investigation of two promising advanced neural networks, namely the LOGICON and the PNN, was conducted. The PNN was more appealing due to its universality potential. The PNN was modified using a principal components transformation layer that resulted in performance enhancements. This together with its potential universality, led to the choice of the modified PNN for in-depth development. The in-depth development stage was divided into three phases. The first was the extraction of a new and improved input feature set that produced more distinct classes in the input feature space. The new features enhanced the transferability of the PNN and made the framework more compliant with the universality requirements. The second phase was the on-site real time retraining of the PNN after transferability, a phase that produced near optimal classification results and detection performance. The third phase was the development of a post processor output interpreter that linked the isolated 30 second outputs of the PNN and produced a sequentially updated probabilistic measure of existence of an incident in the field. The overall PNN-based framework was found to be fully compliant with the entire set of universality requirements. Finally, a new approach for training a multi-smoothing-parameter version of the PNN was investigated. The approach utilized genetic algorithms for optimizing the selection of the smoothing parameters. Obtained results indicated an improvement in performance over the single smoothing parameter PNN but at the expense of longer training time. The superiority and universality of a particular advanced neural network model, namely the PNN, was concluded in this research, as compared to the Logicon and the MLF neural networks, as well as existing conventional freeway incident detection algorithms. Adding the principal components transformation layer to the PNN was found to enhance its performance. Although the genetically optimized version of the PNN showed better transferability, both versions showed equally good performance after retraining. The PNN was concluded to be more practical for TMC implementation due to its instantaneous training capabilities.
Suggested Citation
Baher Abdulhai (1996) A Neuro-Genetic-Based Universally Transferable Freeway Incident Detection Framework. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991035093189704701.research report
Reducing Congestion by Using Integrated Corridor Management Technology to Divert Vehicles to Park-and-Ride Facilities
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Abstract
Connected Vehicles (CV) technology offers significant potential for managing traffic congestion and improving mobility along transportation corridors. This report presents a novel approach using integrated corridor management (ICM) technology to divert CVs to underutilized park-and-ride facilities where drivers can park their vehicle and access public transportation. Using vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) communication protocols, the system collects data on downstream traffic and sends messages regarding available park-and-ride options to upstream traffic. A deep reinforcement learning (DRL) program controls the messaging, with the objective of maximizing traffic throughput and minimizing CO2 emissions and travel time. The ICM strategy is simulated on a realistic model of Interstate 5 using Veins simulation software. The results show marginal improvement in throughput, freeway travel time, and CO2 emissions, but increased travel delay for drivers choosing to divert to a park-and-ride facility to take public transportation for a portion of their travel.
Suggested Citation
Mohanad Odema, Mohamad Fakih, Tyler Zhang and Mohammad A. Al Faruque (2023) Reducing Congestion by Using Integrated Corridor Management Technology to Divert Vehicles to Park-and-Ride Facilities. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2dn8411b (Accessed: October 11, 2023).working paper
Factors Influencing Destination Choice for the Urban Grocery Shopping Trip
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Author(s)
Working Paper
Abstract
Destination choice for the urban grocery shopping trip is hypothesized to be determined by three factors: the individual’s perception of the destination, the individual’s accessibility to the destination and the relative number of opportunities to exer cise any particular choice. Results of a multinomial logit model estimation support this hypothesis and provide useful information concerning the role of urban form in this destination choice situ ation. It is determined that accessibility is the primary aspect influencing destination choice and that its effect is nonlinear.
Suggested Citation
Will Recker and Lidia P. Kostyniuk (1977) Factors Influencing Destination Choice for the Urban Grocery Shopping Trip. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-77-7. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8mp29319.policy brief
Job Access, Agency Cost, and VMT Impacts of Offering Microtransit alongside Fixed-route Transit
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Author(s)
Policy Brief
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Abstract
Public transit ridership has declined in major US cities over the past decade. Integrating traditional fixed-route transit with flexible microtransit has been proposed to enhance ridership, mobility, accessibility, and sustainability. This project surveyed California transit agencies on their microtransit services to identify challenges to integrating them with fixed-route services. An agent-based model combining the two modes of transit was developed to evaluate different operational designs. FleetPy, an open-source simulation tool, modeled microtransit dynamics. The study examined design impacts, such as fixed route headways and microtransit fleet size, in downtown San Diego and Lemon Grove, California. Results showed that while microtransit reduces fixed-route ridership and requires higher subsidies, it significantly boosts job accessibility.
Suggested Citation
Michael Hyland, Susan Pike, Siwei Hu, Jacob Berkel, Yan Xing, Ritun Saha, Geoffrey Vander Veen and Dingtong Yang (2024) Job Access, Agency Cost, and VMT Impacts of Offering Microtransit alongside Fixed-route Transit. Policy Brief UC-ITS-RIMI-4I. UC ITS. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7922/g2th8k2w.conference paper
State-of-the art of freight forecasting modeling: Lessons learned and the road ahead
Proceedings of the 88th annnual meeting of the transportation research board
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Author(s)
Suggested Citation
C.H. Yang, Y-J. Chow and A.C. Regan (2009) “State-of-the art of freight forecasting modeling: Lessons learned and the road ahead”, in Proceedings of the 88th annnual meeting of the transportation research board.MS Thesis
Modeling of traffic instabilities and phantom jam: The LWR model with stochastic speed-density relation
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Author(s)
Abstract
This study will evaluate the real causes of phantom traffic jam by evaluating different continuous car-following models under different conditions. Finding the origins of these instabilities would lead to apply some control measures which may solve or minimize the stop and go traffic patterns and improve the whole road performance.