published journal article

A Numerical Solution of Three-Dimensional Problems in Dynamic Elasticity

Journal of Applied Mechanics

Publication Date

March 1, 1970

Author(s)

Abstract

The equations governing the dynamic deformation of an elastic solid are considered as a symmetric hyperbolic system of linear first-order partial-differential equations. The characteristic properties of the system are determined and a numerical method for obtaining the solution of mixed initial and boundary-value problems in elastodynamics is presented. The method, based on approximate integral relations along bicharacteristics, is an extension of the method proposed by Clifton for plane problems in dynamic elasticity and provides a system of difference equations, with second-order accuracy, for the explicit determination of the solution. Application of the method to a problem which has a known solution provides numerical evidence of the convergence and stability of the method.

Suggested Citation
W. W. Recker (1970) “A Numerical Solution of Three-Dimensional Problems in Dynamic Elasticity”, Journal of Applied Mechanics, 37(1), pp. 116–122. Available at: 10.1115/1.3408418.

conference paper

Cvo perspectives on the usefulness of various sources of traffic information

Proceedings of the 80th annual meeting of the transportation research board

Publication Date

January 1, 2001

Abstract

The objective of this research is to understand how trucking companies perceive the benefits of traditional and advanced traveler information sources. There is considerable interest in identifying the appropriate public sector role for investments in real-time traveler information sources. Managers in charge of the California operations of more than 1,100 private and for-hire trucking companies were asked to evaluate the usefulness of various sources of traffic information. These evaluations were collected on ordinal scales, and nonlinear canonical correlations analysis models were computed to simultaneously link company characteristics and perceptions of the value of information sources for dispatchers and for drivers. In addition, perceptions of the benefits of a set of improved sources of accurate, up-to-the- minute traffic information were examined. The results show how segments of the trucking industry value different sources of traffic information

Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob and Amelia C. Regan (2001) “Cvo perspectives on the usefulness of various sources of traffic information”, in Proceedings of the 80th annual meeting of the transportation research board, p. 30 p..

working paper

Objective and Subjective Dimensions of Travel Impedance as Determinants of Commuting Stress

Publication Date

March 1, 1989

Author(s)

Raymond Novaco, Daniel Stokols, Louis Milanesi

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-89-4

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

The stressful characteristics of commuting constraints are conceptualized in terms of both physical and perceptual conditions of travel impedance. This study develops and operationalizes the concept of subjective impedance, as a complement to our previously developed concept of impedance as a physically defined condition of commuting stress. The stress impacts of high impedance commuting were examined in a study of 79 employees of two companies in the follow-up testing of a longitudinal study. Subjective impedance was found to be overlapping but not isomorphic with physical impedance, and these two dimensions were found to have differential relationships with health and well being outcomes. The physical impedance construct received further confirmation in validational analyses and in predicted effects on various illness measures and job satisfaction. The newly constructed subjective impedance index was significantly related to evening home mood, residential satisfaction, and chest pain. Job change also was found to be influenced primarily by commuting satisfaction. The results are discussed within an ecological framework emphasizing inter-domain transfer effects and situational moderators of commuting stress.

Suggested Citation
Raymond W. Novaco, Daniel Stokols and Louis Milanesi (1989) Objective and Subjective Dimensions of Travel Impedance as Determinants of Commuting Stress. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-89-4. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8xr9q9gt.

policy brief

Leveraging Robotaxis to Support Transit Riders in Emergencies

Suggested Citation
Arash Ghaffar, Jiangbo (Gabe) Yu and Michael F. Hyland (2025) Leveraging Robotaxis to Support Transit Riders in Emergencies. Policy Brief. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7fc5750v (Accessed: September 16, 2025).

research report

Assessment and Development of Commodity Flow, Logistics, and Other Relevant Goods Movement Data Sources to Facilitate Statewide Freight Modeling

Suggested Citation
Stephen G. Ritchie, Shin-Ting Jeng, Andre Tok, Dmitri Arkhipov, Pedro Veiga De Camargo, Rex Chen, Joseph Y.J. Chow, Jae Young Jung, Fatemeh Ranaiefar and Miyuan Zhao (2010) Assessment and Development of Commodity Flow, Logistics, and Other Relevant Goods Movement Data Sources to Facilitate Statewide Freight Modeling. Research Report. ITS-Irvine.

Phd Dissertation

Probabilistic learning for analysis of sensor-based human activity data

Abstract

As sensors that measure daily human activity become increasingly affordable and ubiquitous, there is a corresponding need for algorithms that unearth useful information from the resulting sensor observations. Many of these sensors record a time series of counts reflecting two behaviors: (1) the underlying hourly, daily, and weekly rhythms of natural human activity, and (2) bursty periods of unusual behavior. This dissertation explores a probabilistic framework for human-generated count data that (a) models the underlying recurrent patterns and (b) simultaneously separates and characterizes unusual activity via a Poisson-Markov model. The problems of event detection and characterization using real world, noisy sensor data with significant portions of data missing and corrupted measurements due to sensor failure are investigated. The framework is extended in order to perform higher level inferences, such as linking event models in a multi-sensor building occupancy model, and incorporating the occupancy measurement from loop detectors (in addition to the count measurement) to apply the model to problems in transportation research.

Suggested Citation
Jonathan Hutchins (2010) Probabilistic learning for analysis of sensor-based human activity data. Ph.D.. University of California, Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991007581279704701 (Accessed: October 13, 2023).

published journal article

Joint design of multimodal transit networks and shared autonomous mobility fleets

Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies

Publication Date

April 1, 2020

Author(s)

Helen K. R. F. Pinto, Michael Hyland, Hani Mahmassani, I. Ömer Verbas

Abstract

Providing quality transit service to travelers in low-density areas, particularly travelers without personal vehicles, is a constant challenge for transit agencies. The advent of fully-autonomous vehicles (AVs) and their inclusion in mobility service fleets may allow transit agencies to offer better service and/or reduce their own capital and operational costs. This study focuses on the problem of allocating resources between transit patterns and operating (or subsidizing) shared-use AV mobility services (SAMSs) in a large metropolitan area. To address this question, a joint transit network redesign and SAMS fleet size determination problem (JTNR-SFSDP) is introduced, and a bi-level mathematical programming formulation and solution approach are presented. The upper-level problem modifies a transit network frequency setting problem (TNFSP) formulation via incorporating SAMS fleet size as a decision variable and allowing the removal of bus routes. The lower-level problem consists of a dynamic combined mode choice-traveler assignment problem (DCMC-TAP) formulation. The heuristic solution procedure involves solving the upper-level problem using a nonlinear programming solver and solving the lower-level problem using an iterative agent-based assignment-simulation approach. To illustrate the effectiveness of the modeling framework, this study uses traveler demand from Chicago along with the region’s existing multimodal transit network. The computational results indicate significant traveler benefits, in terms of improved average traveler wait times, associated with optimizing the joint design of multimodal transit networks and SAMS fleets compared with the initial transit network design.

Suggested Citation
Helen K. R. F. Pinto, Michael F. Hyland, Hani S. Mahmassani and I. Ömer Verbas (2020) “Joint design of multimodal transit networks and shared autonomous mobility fleets”, Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies, 113, pp. 2–20. Available at: 10.1016/j.trc.2019.06.010.

Phd Dissertation

Cellular signals for navigation 4g, 5g, and beyond

Abstract

Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) have long been the cornerstone for positioning, navigation, and timing. Despite their widespread use, GNSS signals face vulnerabilities such as jamming, spoofing, and unreliable coverage in various environments like urban canyons, indoors, tunnels, and parking structures. These limitations make exclusive reliance on GNSS inadequate for the rigorous demands of future applications, including autonomous vehicles (AVs), intelligent transportation systems, and location-based services. To enhance GNSS performance in challenging settings, traditional methods have typically incorporated dead-reckoning sensors like inertial measurement units, lidars, or cameras. These sensors, however, accumulate errors over time and only offer navigation solutions within a local frame, relative to the user equipment’s (UE) initial position. In contrast, alternative signal-based approaches, known as signals of opportunity (SOPs) – encompassing AM/FM radio, satellite communication signals, digital television signals, Wi-Fi, and cellular – hold considerable promise as global navigation sources in GNSS-challenged environments. Among SOPs, cellular signals, particularly from third-generation (3G, code-division multiple access (CDMA)), fourth-generation (4G, long-term evolution (LTE)), and fifth-generation (5G, new radio (NR)) networks, stand out as potential navigation aids. Their navigation-friendly characteristics include ubiquity, geometric diversity, high carrier frequencies, spectral diversity, spatial diversity, broad bandwidth, strong signal strength, and free accessibility. Nevertheless, as SOPs are primarily designed for communication rather than navigation, utilizing cellular signals for navigational purposes presents several challenges. These include (1) the lack of specific low-level signal and error models for optimal state and parameter extraction for positioning and timing, (2) the absence of published robust, efficient, and reliable receiver architectures to generate navigation observables, (3) continual updates and changes in cellular protocols, and (4) the scarcity of frameworks for high-accuracy navigation using such signals. This dissertation addresses these challenges, focusing on cellular signals from 4G and 5G networks, with potential extensions to future cellular systems. The foundational contributions of this work are empirically validated on various platforms including ground vehicles (GVs), unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and high-altitude aircraft, demonstrating GNSS-level navigation accuracy.

Suggested Citation
Ali Abdallah (2023) Cellular signals for navigation 4g, 5g, and beyond. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991035582060804701.

conference paper

Joint design of multimodal transit networks and shared autonomous mobility fleets

Proceedings of the 98th annual meeting of the transportation research board

Publication Date

January 1, 2019

Author(s)

Helen Pinto, Michael Hyland, Hani Mahmassani, öMer Verbas

Abstract

Providing quality transit service to travelers in low-density areas, particularly travelers without personal vehicles, is a constant challenge for transit agencies. The advent of fully-autonomous vehicles (AVs) and their inclusion in mobility service fleets may allow transit agencies to offer travelers better service and/or reduce their own capital and operational costs. This study focuses on the problem of allocating resources between transit patterns and operating (or subsidizing) shared-use AV mobility services (SAMSs) in a large metropolitan area. To address this problem, a bi-level mathematical programming formulation and solution algorithm are presented for the joint transit network redesign and SAMS fleet size determination problem (JTNR-SFSDP). The upper-level problem modifies a transit network frequency setting problem (TNFSP) formulation via incorporating SAMS fleet size as a decision variable. The lower-level problem consists of a dynamic combined mode choiceâ??traveler assignment problem (DCMC-TAP) formulation. The solution procedure involves solving the upper-level problem using a nonlinear programming solver and solving the lower-level problem using an iterative agent-based simulation-assignment approach. To illustrate the effectiveness of the modeling framework, this study uses traveler demand from Chicago along with the regionâ??s existing multimodal transit network. The results indicate the ability of the solution procedure to solve the bi-level JTNR-SFSDP. Moreover, computational results indicate significant traveler benefits associated with optimizing the joint design of multimodal transit networks and SAMS fleets.

Suggested Citation
Helen Pinto, Michael Hyland, Hani S. Mahmassani and Ömer Verbas (2019) “Joint design of multimodal transit networks and shared autonomous mobility fleets”, in Proceedings of the 98th annual meeting of the transportation research board, p. 7p.