working paper

The Determinants of Growth of Employment Subcenters

Abstract

This paper presents an empirical analysis of subcenter growth. We develop a series of hypotheses based on the theoretical concepts that have been proposed as explanations for the emergence and growth of subcenters. We then conduct tests of these hypotheses using 1970-80 data from the Los Angeles region. We find that subcenters containing fast-growing industries tended to grow rapidly, and so did those close to airports. There is weak evidence that large subcenters and those located near downtown Los Angeles grew more slowly in proportional terms, possibly indicating diseconomies of scale due to congestion.

conference paper

Low-overhead aging-aware resource management on embedded GPUs

Proceedings of the 54th annual design automation conference 2017

Publication Date

June 1, 2017

Author(s)

Haeseung Lee, Muhammad Shafique, Mohammad Al Faruque
Suggested Citation
Haeseung Lee, Muhammad Shafique and Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque (2017) “Low-overhead aging-aware resource management on embedded GPUs”, in Proceedings of the 54th annual design automation conference 2017. ACM. Available at: 10.1145/3061639.3062277.

published journal article

Workings of the melting pot: Social networks and the evolution of population attributes

JOURNAL OF REGIONAL SCIENCE

Publication Date

January 1, 2007

Author(s)

Jan Brueckner, Oleg Smirnov

Abstract

This paper links the two nascent economic literatures on social networks and cultural assimilation by investigating the evolution of population attributes in a simple model where agents are influenced by their acquaintances. The main conclusion of the analysis is that attributes converge to a melting-pot equilibrium, where everyone is identical, provided the social network exhibits a sufficient degree of interconnectedness. When the model is extended to allow an expanding acquaintance set, convergence is guaranteed provided a weaker interconnectedness condition is satisfied, and convergence is rapid. If the intensity of interactions with acquaintances becomes endogenous, convergence (when it occurs) is slowed when agents prefer to interact with people like themselves and hastened when interaction with dissimilar agents is preferred.

Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner and Oleg Smirnov (2007) “Workings of the melting pot: Social networks and the evolution of population attributes”, JOURNAL OF REGIONAL SCIENCE, 47(2), pp. 209–228. Available at: 10.1111/j.1467-9787.2007.00506.x.

working paper

Public Works, the Courts, and the Consent Decree: Environmental and Social Effects of the “Freeway With a Heart”

Abstract

Transportation planning in the United States has undergone a revolution in the past two decades. As recently as the late 1960s, with little citizen participation apart from public hearings on specific routes (Rosener, 1975), technical experts laid out plans for major transportation facilities, and their agency colleagues implemented those plans through standard routines. These routines often included noncontested condemnation and considerable alteration of the physical environment.

policy brief

Free and Reduced Transit Fare Programs in California Increased After COVID-19–But Can it Last?

Abstract

Free and reduced transit fare programs can boost transit ridership and benefit low-income individuals, students, seniors, and those with disabilities though financial sustainability is typically a concern. During the COVID-19 pandemic, transit agencies across California faced dramatic ridership declines and began expanding these programs—particularly for students—as a strategy to rebuild demand. Yet, little is known about how widespread free and reduced transit fare programs have become, what impacts they are having on ridership, and how agencies are funding them. To help address these questions, we surveyed California transit agencies in 2019 and 2024 and interviewed selected agencies to better understand how these programs are working in practice.

conference paper

A Structural Analysis of COVID-19 Spread and Human Mobility in the Early Phase of the Pandemic

101st Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board

Publication Date

January 1, 2022

Author(s)

Rezwana Rafiq, Tanjeeb Ahmed, Yusuf Sarwar Uddin
Suggested Citation
Rezwana Rafiq, Tanjeeb Ahmed and Md Yusuf Sarwar Uddin (2022) “A Structural Analysis of COVID-19 Spread and Human Mobility in the Early Phase of the Pandemic”. 101st Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board.

Preprint Journal Article

Fleet Operator Perspectives on Alternative Fuels for Heavy-Duty Vehicles

Abstract

Despite the deployment of alternative fuel vehicles (AFVs) being one of the promising measures to reduce air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions, AFVs still represent a very small share in the heavy-duty vehicle (HDV) sector. Understanding HDV fleet operator perspectives on alternative fuels is critical to developing effective demand-side strategies to facilitate wider and more rapid adoption of heavy-duty AFVs. This study explored California HDV fleet operator perspectives on viable alternative fuel options in the next 10 to 20 years, along with motivators for, and barriers to, such adoption. Eighteen in-depth qualitative interviews were conducted, after which thematic analysis was employed to analyze the interview data. Electric, hydrogen, compressed natural gas (CNG), and hybrid options were commonly perceived as viable in the 2030s by the participating organizations. Various optimistic aspects were addressed, including advanced technologies and emission reduction benefits (electric/hydrogen), continued fuel commitments due to their fleet or infrastructure investments already made (CNG), and lower complexity in fleet routing along with favorable driver acceptance (hybrid options). However, many concerns and uncertainties were also reported, including functional unsuitability (electric), uncompetitive upfront costs (hydrogen), unready infrastructure, perceived unavailability of vehicles, uncertain return on investment (electric/hydrogen), and unpromising support from state government (CNG). The study findings help fill a key knowledge gap in AFV fleet adoption research regarding HDV fleet operator perspectives, and contribute to developing demand-side strategies to aid the success of AFV diffusion throughout the HDV market.

Suggested Citation
Youngeun Bae, Craig R. Rindt, Suman Mitra and Stephen G. Ritchie (2022) “Fleet Operator Perspectives on Alternative Fuels for Heavy-Duty Vehicles”. Rochester, NY: SSRN. Available at: https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=4253440 (Accessed: October 5, 2023).

conference paper

WIP: Deployability improvement, stealthiness user study, and safety impact assessment on real vehicle for dirty road patch attack

Workshop on Automotive and Autonomous Vehicle Security (AutoSec)

Publication Date

January 1, 2021

Author(s)

Takami Sato, Junjie Shen, Ningfei Wang, Yunhan Jack Jia, Xue Lin, Qi Alfred Chen
Suggested Citation
Takami Sato, Junjie Shen, Ningfei Wang, Yunhan Jack Jia, Xue Lin and Qi Alfred Chen (2021) “WIP: Deployability improvement, stealthiness user study, and safety impact assessment on real vehicle for dirty road patch attack”, in Workshop on Automotive and Autonomous Vehicle Security (AutoSec), p. 25. Available at: https://www.ndss-symposium.org/wp-content/uploads/autosec2021_23027_paper.pdf (Accessed: October 11, 2023).

published journal article

An instantaneous kinematic wave theory of diverging traffic

Transportation Research Part B: Methodological

Publication Date

February 1, 2013
Suggested Citation
Wen-Long Jin and H. Michael Zhang (2013) “An instantaneous kinematic wave theory of diverging traffic”, Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, 48(1), pp. 1–16. Available at: 10.1016/j.trb.2012.12.001.

published journal article

Individual truck speed estimation from advanced single inductive loops

Transportation Research Record

Suggested Citation
Yiqiao Li, Andre Y.C. Tok and Stephen G. Ritchie (2019) “Individual truck speed estimation from advanced single inductive loops”, Transportation Research Record, 2673(5), pp. 272–284. Available at: 10.1177/0361198119841289.