published journal article

Stable local dynamics for day-to-day departure time choice

Transportation Research Part B: Methodological

Publication Date

July 1, 2021

Author(s)

Abstract

Existing dynamical systems for day-to-day departure time choice are either unstable, or stable but assuming drivers to possess complete information and make decisions on both arrival and departure times. In this paper, we present a new dynamical system with local shifting of departure times, such that a driver only defers or advances his/her departure time to a time interval later or earlier with lower costs. We establish the asymmetrical upper bounds of the deferral and advance coefficients for the discrete model to be well-defined. We then derive the continuous version as a kinematic wave model and present some examples of symmetrical deferral and advance coefficients. We demonstrate that the stationary state of the dynamical system is the same as the user equilibrium, and the user equilibrium is proved with Lyapunov’s second method to be stable for the symmetrical deferral and advance coefficients. With numerical examples, we verify the analytical results and examine the model’s sensitivity to different factors with different combinations of heuristic asymmetrical coefficients and theoretically stable symmetrical coefficients. Both analytical and numerical results confirm that the new dynamical system is asymptotically stable in a stability region. This study provides some guidelines on how to derive new day-to-day dynamical system models of departure time user equilibrium. Such a dynamical system can potentially be applied to solve the general dynamic traffic assignment problem in the future.

Suggested Citation
Wen-Long Jin (2021) “Stable local dynamics for day-to-day departure time choice”, Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, 149, pp. 463–479. Available at: 10.1016/j.trb.2021.05.013.

Preprint Journal Article

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

Abstract

The goal of this study is to provide insights into the expected role of medium-duty electric vehicles (EVs) in urban delivery fleets and the effectiveness of EV subsidies on EV fleet penetration and tailpipe emissions, in the coming decades. To meet this goal, we propose a modeling framework that determines the minimum-cost fleet size and mix (of EVs and conventional vehicles) and vehicle routes for a profit-maximizing delivery company. Second, we conduct extensive analyses using this modeling framework and Southern California network data; we vary the EV driving range, per-mile cost of EVs, demand rate, service region size, and driver working hours. We find that the optimal fleet mix nearly always includes EVs and conventional vehicles. Moreover, we find that EV subsidies have limited effectiveness with current EV batteries and service regions designed around conventional vehicles. Hence, improving EV battery technology is critical to electrifying urban delivery fleets.

Suggested Citation
Dingtong Yang and Michael Hyland (2023) “Electric Vehicles in Urban Delivery Fleets: How Far Can They Go?”. Rochester, NY: SSRN. Available at: 10.2139/ssrn.4569874.

MS Thesis

Investigation and implementation of a gradient projection algorithm for the traffic assignment problem

Publication Date

January 1, 1994
Suggested Citation
Subodh Sudhir. Rajadhyaksha (1994) Investigation and implementation of a gradient projection algorithm for the traffic assignment problem. MS Thesis. University of California, Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991034343319704701.

published journal article

A structural model of temporal change in multi-modal travel demand

Transportation Research Part A: General

Publication Date

November 1, 1987

Author(s)

Thomas Golob, Henk Meurs
Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob and Henk Meurs (1987) “A structural model of temporal change in multi-modal travel demand”, Transportation Research Part A: General, 21(6), pp. 391–400. Available at: 10.1016/0191-2607(87)90028-8.

conference paper

Commercial vehicle classification using vehicle signature data

Proceedings of the 88th annual meeting of the transportation research board (DVD), washington D.C.

Suggested Citation
H. Liu, S. Jeng, A. Tok and S.G. Ritchie (2009) “Commercial vehicle classification using vehicle signature data”, in Proceedings of the 88th annual meeting of the transportation research board (DVD), washington D.C.. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3bc653j7.

published journal article

Confidentiality breach through acoustic side-channel in cyber-physical additive manufacturing systems

ACM Trans. Cyber-Phys. Syst.

Publication Date

February 1, 2018

Author(s)

Sujit Rokka Chhetri, Arquimedes Canedo, Mohammad Al Faruque
Suggested Citation
Sujit Rokka Chhetri, Arquimedes Canedo and Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque (2018) “Confidentiality breach through acoustic side-channel in cyber-physical additive manufacturing systems”, ACM Trans. Cyber-Phys. Syst., 2(1), pp. 1–25. Available at: 10.1145/3078622.

research report

Rail Transit Ridership Changes in COVID-19: Lessons from Station Area Characteristics

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on public transit ridership in the United States, especially for rail transit. Land use, development density, and the pedestrian environment are strongly associated with station-level transit ridership. This study examines how these characteristics affect transit ridership pre- and post-COVID and how they differ across station types based on longitudinal data for 242 rail stations belonging to Bay Area Rapid Transit, San Diego Metropolitan Transit System, Sacramento Regional Transit, and LA Metro between 2019 and 2021. We found overall a 72% decrease in station-level ridership, but changes were not uniform. Station areas with a higher number of low-income workers and more retail or entertainment jobs tend to have lower ridership declines, while areas with a large number of high-income workers, high-wage jobs, and higher job accessibility by transit had more ridership losses. When comparing station area ridership and activity changes based on mobile phone user data, ridership declined more drastically than activity across all four rail systems, which implies that rail transit riders switched to other modes of transportation when accessing the station areas. Given these findings, it is likely that rail transit services oriented toward commute travel, especially core station areas with jobs for higher income workers, will continue to have an uneven recovery, posing critical implications for transit resilience planning and equity in the post-pandemic era. Considering sources of funding other than passenger fares to sustain rail transit, strategizing to reinvent and reinforce downtowns as destinations, and shifting rail transit services to appeal to non-commute travel can be promising strategies to support rail transit.

Suggested Citation
Susan Pike, Michael McNally, Daniel Rodriguez and Meiqing Li (2024) Rail Transit Ridership Changes in COVID-19: Lessons from Station Area Characteristics. Research Report. UC ITS. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7922/g2g44nnx.

working paper

Urban Spatial Structure

Publication Date

March 1, 1997

Associated Project

Author(s)

Alex Anas, Richard Arnott, Kenneth Small

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-97-3

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

In this essay we offer a view of what economics can say about and learn from urban structure. In doing so, we reach into neighboring disciplines; but we do not aspire to a complete survey even of urban economics, much less of the related fields of urban geography or urban planning. Our focus on internal structure should provide Mayor Daley a more complete basis for comparing Chicago’s density to that of New York, or its degree of centralization to that of Los Angeles. (Throughout this essay we use the word “city,” or the name of a particular city, to mean an entire urban region; other terms with similar meanings are “metropolitan area” and “urban area.”)

Suggested Citation
Alex Anas, Richard Arnott and Kenneth A. Small (1997) Urban Spatial Structure. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-97-3. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0nk4f7s0.

research report

Event-based ATIS: Practical Implementation and Evaluation of Optimized Strategies

Abstract

This project further adapt and enhance the previous research of relevance to event-based Advanced Traveler Information Systems (ATIS) and implement the algorithms for traffic management in Anaheim. This study is also answering some basic questions in ATIS implementation associated with routing strategies, driver’s compliance and network performance. This research develops algorithms for static and dynamic optimal Changeable Message Signs (CMS). The optimized CMS schemes are based on performance evaluations using a traffic simulation-based evaluation model, DYNASMART (Dynamic Network Assignment Simulation Model for Advanced Road Telematics). Performance of ATIS depends on drivers’ compliance behavior, and the compliance issue is addressed in this research. This study develops a framework of driver’s compliance model, and incorporates it into the evaluation framework. The model includes inherent value of guidance system, and the value is analyzed via day-to-day update approach. A limited field test is implemented for the event traffic management. The implementation involves the Caltrans-UCI ATMS research testbed framework at the UCI Institute of Transportation Studies, as well as the physical hardware available for communication to the city of Anaheim. The analytical and heuristic algorithms proposed for use here include those for static and dynamic traffic simulation-assignment. The essential part of algorithmic research is to adapt the network optimization algorithms to generate traffic rerouting plans, which involve aggregation of network paths and their translation to a format usable for changeable message signs existing in Anaheim, as well as other event-based information supply hardware.

Suggested Citation
R. Jayakrishnan, Wei K. Tsai, Jun-Seok Oh and Jeffrey Adler (2001) Event-based ATIS: Practical Implementation and Evaluation of Optimized Strategies. Final Report UCB-ITS-PRR-2001-1. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6277g180.

research report

CARMEN Project 5: Resilience and Validation of GNSS PNT Solutions

Publication Date

November 20, 2023

Author(s)

Todd Humphreys, Qi Alfred Chen, Umit Ozguner, Charles Toth

Areas of Expertise

Suggested Citation
Todd Humphreys, Qi Alfred Chen, Umit Ozguner and Charles Toth (2023) CARMEN Project 5: Resilience and Validation of GNSS PNT Solutions. Final Report. CARMEN UTC. Available at: https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.10246488 (Accessed: October 10, 2025).