published journal article

An eco-driving algorithm based on vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) communications for signalized intersections

Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies

Abstract

Efficient operations of traffic signals are of critical importance in urban areas, as signalized intersections prevent the smooth flow of traffic and cause delays. This paper devises an eco-driving algorithm based on connected vehicle technologies, with basic kinematic wave and car-following models. The objectives of the proposed algorithm are to increase the throughput of signal intersections and decrease fuel consumption. Specifically, we focus on a signalized intersection under mixed traffic flows with connected and autonomous vehicles (AVs) and human-driven vehicles (HVs). Through the proposed algorithm, the vehicle speeds at the intersection (i.e., the intersection control speed) and signal timings can be adjusted in response to the real-time traffic conditions. According to the signal timing and the speed at the intersection, the algorithm estimates the time points of each vehicle entering the intersection. An advisory speed limit approach is formulated for each AV, making the vehicle enter the intersection at the allocated timing with the control speed. An onboard alert is set for each HV to stop or pass through. The algorithm is evaluated under various market penetration rates of AVs, different congestion levels, and with signal actuation. The results indicate that the eco-driving algorithm can increase the throughput and average travel speed at signalized intersections in addition to gaining fuel savings.

Suggested Citation
Pengyuan Sun, Daisik Nam, R. Jayakrishnan and Wenlong Jin (2022) “An eco-driving algorithm based on vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) communications for signalized intersections”, Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies, 144, p. 103876. Available at: 10.1016/j.trc.2022.103876.

Phd Dissertation

An optimization Framework for Shared Mobility in Dynamic Transportation Networks

Publication Date

January 1, 2016

Author(s)

Abstract

Recent advances in communication technology coupled with increasing environmental concerns, road congestion, and the high cost of vehicle ownership have directed more attention to the opportunity cost of empty seats traveling throughout the transportation networks every day. Peer-to-peer (P2P) ridesharing is a good way of using the existing passenger-movement capacity on the vehicles, thereby addressing the concerns about the increasing demand for transportation that is too costly to address via infrastructural expansion.This dissertation is dedicated to the optimization of the matching process between the participants in a ridesharing system. More specifically, focus of this dissertation is on multi-hop matching, in which riders have the possibility of transferring between vehicles. Different algorithms have been presented for various implementation strategies of ridesharing systems. Multiple case studies assess the important role ridesharing can play as a separate mode, or in conjunction with other modes of transportation, in multi-modal settings.

Suggested Citation
Neda Masoud (2016) An optimization Framework for Shared Mobility in Dynamic Transportation Networks. Ph.D.. UC Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2c97k3q3 (Accessed: October 12, 2023).

Preprint Journal Article

Household Activity Pattern Problem with Automated Vehicle-Enabled Intermodal Trips

Abstract

Driverless or fully automated vehicles (AVs) are expected to fundamentally change how individuals and households travel and how vehicles use roadway infrastructure. The first goal of this study is to develop a modeling framework of activity-constrained household travel in a future multi-modal network with private AVs, shared-use AVs, transit, and intermodal AV-transit travel options. The second goal is to analyze the potential impacts of AVs—including intermodal AV-transit travel—on (a) household-level travel behavior, (b) household travel costs, (c) demand for transport modes, including transit, and (d) vehicle miles traveled or VMT. To meet the first goal, we propose and formulate the Household Activity Pattern Problem with AV-enabled Intermodal Trips (HAPP-AV-IT) that incorporates AV deadheading and intermodal AV-transit trips. The modeling framework extends prior HAPP-based formulations that model household-level travel decisions as vehicle (and person) scheduling and routing problems, similar to the pickup and delivery problem with time-windows. To meet the second goal, we apply the HAPP-AV-IT to two case studies and conduct many computational experiments. We use synthetic activity location data for synthetic households and a fictitious medium-size network with a road network, transit network, residential locations, activity locations, and parking locations. The computational results illustrate (i) the critical role that household AV ownership plays in terms of household travel decisions, modal demand, and VMT, (ii) that with AVs, deadheading accounts for nearly half of vehicle operating miles, and (iii) that AV-based intermodal trips can reduce household travel costs for some households. This last finding suggests that intermodal AV-transit trips may exist in a driverless vehicle future, and therefore, transit agencies and transportation planners should consider how to serve this market.

Suggested Citation
Younghun Bahk and Michael Hyland (2024) “Household Activity Pattern Problem with Automated Vehicle-Enabled Intermodal Trips”. Rochester, NY: SSRN. Available at: 10.2139/ssrn.4736532.

research report

Documentation of the Irvine Integrated Corridor Freeway Ramp Metering and Arterial Adaptive Control Field Operational Test

Abstract

A systematic evaluation of the performance and effectiveness of a Field Operational Test (FOT) of an integrated corridor-level adaptive control system was attempted from fall 1994 through spring 1999 in the City of Irvine, California. The FOT was conducted by a consortium consisting of the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), the City of Irvine, and two private sector consultants, National Engineering Technologies, Inc. (NET) and Farradyne Systems, Inc. (FSI, now PB/FSI), with the City of Irvine as the lead agency. The FOT was cost-share funded by the Federal Highway Administration as part of the Intelligent Vehicle Highway System Field Operational Test Program. The FOT involves an integrated Advanced Transportation Management System (ATMS) which extends the capabilities of existing traffic management systems in the City of Irvine and in Caltrans District 12 (D12). The evaluation originally entailed both a technical performance assessment and a comprehensive institutional analysis. This documentation of the Irvine Field Operation Test does not constitute a formal evaluation due to the failure of any of the planned technologies to be successfully implemented in the field. Due to the extended time frame associated with the project and the significant range of technical and institutional issues associated with the development and eventual failure of the FOT, a summary of project development, institutional barriers, and technical failures is provided.

Suggested Citation
M. G. McNally, James E. Moore and C. Arthur MacCarley (2001) Documentation of the Irvine Integrated Corridor Freeway Ramp Metering and Arterial Adaptive Control Field Operational Test. Final Report UCB-ITS-PRR-2001-2. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/75h99809.

conference paper

Identifying Winners and Losers Under Different Fare Structures for Integrated Fixed-Route Transit and Microtransit Systems

Proceedings, 104th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board

Publication Date

January 1, 2025

Abstract

Transit agencies are interested in integrating microtransit service with fixed-route transit (FRT) service to leverage the benefits of each mode. In an integrated FRT and microtransit system, fare structures for both FRT and microtransit services play an important role in influencing travelers’ behavior. This paper studies 10 different fare structures and their impacts on travelers’ behavior in the presence of an integrated FRT and microtransit system. We use a flexible agent-based FRT and microtransit modeling framework recently proposed by the authors to study fare structures. We analyze the impacts of fare structures on synthetic travelers in downtown San Diego and Lemon Grove, a small city in San Diego County. The results show that the intermodal transfer discount policy — where a traveler can use FRT freely when transferring from microtransit to FRT or receives a 50% discount on microtransit when transferring from FRT to microtransit — is the most promising. Under this fare structure, the subsidy per transit rider ($8.20 in downtown San Diego and $13.5 in Lemon Grove), transit user out-of-pocket costs ($1.27 in downtown San Diego and $1.71 in Lemon Grove), and auto mode share (80.6% in downtown San Diego and 86.5% in Lemon Grove) are the lowest of any fare structure.

Suggested Citation
Siwei Hu, Michael Hyland, Jacob J. Berkel, Ritun Saha and Geoffrey Vander Veen (2025) “Identifying Winners and Losers Under Different Fare Structures for Integrated Fixed-Route Transit and Microtransit Systems”, in Proceedings, 104th Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board. Washington, D.C..

working paper

The Household Activity Pattern Problem: General Formulation and Solution

Publication Date

September 1, 2000

Author(s)

Abstract

The household activity pattern problem of analyzing/predicting the optimal path of household members through time and space as they complete a prescribed agenda of out-of home activities is posed as a variant of the pickup and delivery problem with time windows. The most general case of the model includes provision for vehicle transfer, selective activity participation, and ridesharing options. A series of examples are solved using generic algorithms. The model is purported to remove existing barriers to the operationalization of activity-based approaches in travel behavior analysis.

published journal article

Optimal sharing of interest-rate risk in mortgage contracts: The effects of potential prepayment and default. Optimal Sharing of Interest-Rate Risk in Mortgage Contracts

Real Estate Economics

Publication Date

January 1, 2016

Author(s)

Jan Brueckner, Kangoh Lee

Abstract

Much of the literature on the economics of mortgage markets has studied the fixed vs. adjustable-rate mortgage choice made by individual borrowers. However, to decide if the outcome of such a choice is efficient or approximately so, it is necessary to explore the question of optimal risk-sharing in mortgage contracts. But because only a small literature has studied this question, more research is clearly warranted. The present article helps fill this gap by developing a simplified version of Arvan and Brueckner’s model, using it to characterize optimal contracts in the absence of mortgage termination, and then exploring how termination via prepayment or default affects optimal risk-sharing. The broad conclusion of the analysis is that potential mortgage termination makes higher risk exposure for borrowers optimal.

Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner and Kangoh Lee (2016) “Optimal sharing of interest-rate risk in mortgage contracts: The effects of potential prepayment and default. Optimal Sharing of Interest-Rate Risk in Mortgage Contracts”, Real Estate Economics, 45(3), pp. 761–784. Available at: 10.1111/1540-6229.12149.

working paper

Competition and Prices in the Deregulated Gas Pipeline Network: A Multivariate Cointegration Analysis

Publication Date

August 1, 1993

Associated Project

Author(s)

Working Paper

No. 203

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

This research uses multivariate cointegration analysis to assess the degree of competition in the U.S. natural gas industry following the move to open access pipeline transportation. The testing methodology allows multiple nodes in the pipeline network to be analyzed simultaneously and is based on recent advances by Johansen (1988, 1991) and Johansen and Juselius (1990) on estimation and hypothesis testing in multivariate cointegrated systems. Daily price data across the North American natural gas transmission grid are analyzed and the results indicate that the pattern of prices between production areas is consistent with allocative efficiency.

Suggested Citation
W. David Walls (1993) Competition and Prices in the Deregulated Gas Pipeline Network: A Multivariate Cointegration Analysis. Working Paper No. 203. Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Irvine: University of California Transportation Center. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9tg8v7zd.

research report

Exploring Sensor Threats and Vulnerabilities in Intelligent Traffic Controllers

Abstract

This study highlights that Inductive Loop Detectors (ILDs), sensors embedded into the pavement for traffic control, are concerningly vulnerable to novel cyber and physical attacks.

policy brief

Can Combining Traffic Sensor Data Make Our Roads Safer?

Abstract

This brief highlights that Inductive Loop Detectors (ILDs), sensors embedded into the pavement for traffic control, are concerningly vulnerable to novel cyber and physical attacks as well as varying environmental conditions.