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.

published journal article

Incorporating perceived travel time reliability into transportation planning and simulation models using information entropy as the measure

Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board

Publication Date

January 1, 2008
Suggested Citation
Jiangbo Gabriel Yu and R Jayakrishnan (2008) “Incorporating perceived travel time reliability into transportation planning and simulation models using information entropy as the measure”, Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board, 2046(1), pp. 1–10.

conference paper

WIP: Adversarial Retroreflective Patches: A Novel Stealthy Attack on Traffic Sign Recognition at Night

Proceedings of the Symposium on Vehicle Security and Privacy

Publication Date

January 1, 2024

Author(s)

Go Tsuruoka, Takami Sato, Qi Alfred Chen, Kazuki Nomoto, Yuna Tanaka, Ryunosuke Kobayashi, Tatsuya Mori
Suggested Citation
Go Tsuruoka, Takami Sato, Qi Alfred Chen, Kazuki Nomoto, Yuna Tanaka, Ryunosuke Kobayashi and Tatsuya Mori (2024) “WIP: Adversarial Retroreflective Patches: A Novel Stealthy Attack on Traffic Sign Recognition at Night”, in Proceedings of the Symposium on Vehicle Security and Privacy. Available at: https://www.ndss-symposium.org/wp-content/uploads/vehiclesec2024-25-paper.pdf (Accessed: September 13, 2024).

research report

Freeway Safety as a Function of Traffic Flow: The FITS Tool for Evaluating ATMS Operations

Abstract

Understanding the benefits of improved traffic flow (reduced congestion) is critical to the assessment of investments in infrastructure or traffic management and control. Improved flow should lead to reductions in travel time, vehicle emissions, fuel usage, psychological stress on drivers, and improved safety.    However, the manner in which safety is improved by smoothing traffic flow is not well understood. The documented research is aimed at shedding light on the complex relationships between traffic flow and traffic accidents (crashes).

Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob, Wilfred W. Recker and Veronica Alvarez (2002) Freeway Safety as a Function of Traffic Flow: The FITS Tool for Evaluating ATMS Operations. Final Report UCB-ITS-PRR-2002-28. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1tc5r61j.

published journal article

Development of an expert system for pavement rehabilitation decision making.

Transportation Research Record

Publication Date

January 1, 1986

Author(s)

Stephen Ritchie, Chung Yeh, Joe P. Mahoney, Newton C. Jackson
Suggested Citation
Stephen G. Ritchie, Che-I. Yeh, Joe P. Mahoney and Newton C. Jackson (1986) “Development of an expert system for pavement rehabilitation decision making.”, Transportation Research Record, pp. 96–103.

working paper

Seamless Travel: Measuring Bicycle and Pedestrian Activity in San Diego County and its Relationship to Land Use, Transportation, Safety, and Facility Type

Abstract

This paper provides the data collection and research results for the Seamless Travel project. The Seamless Travel Project is a research project funded by Caltrans and managed by the University of California Traffic Safety Center, with David Ragland, PhD., as the Principal Investigator and Michael Jones as the Project Manager. The project is funded by Caltrans Division of Innovation and Research and is being conducted by the Traffic Safety Center of University of California Berkeley and Alta Planning + Design.

Measuring bicycle and pedestrian activity is a key element to achieving the goals of the California Blueprint for Bicycling and Walking (the Blueprint). Meeting these goals, which include a 50% increase in bicycling and walking and a 50% decrease in bicycle and pedestrian fatality rates by 2010, and increases in funding for both programs, will require a quantifiable and defensible base of knowledge. This research helps meet two of the Blueprint’s major strategic objectives: (1) collecting data on volumes and facilities, and (2) determining the most cost-effective methods of estimating bicycle and pedestrian collision rates.

working paper

Modeling Non-Ignorable Attrition and Measurement Error in Panel Surveys: An Application to Travel Demand Modeling

Publication Date

September 1, 1999

Associated Project

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-99-5

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

Modern panel surveys frequently suffer from high and non-ignorable attrition, and transportation surveys suffer from poor travel time estimates. The initial sampling process for most transportation surveys is also non-ignorable since rare travel modes are oversampled (and mode choice is the key dependent variable). This paper examines new multiple imputation methods for adjusting forecasts and model estimates to account for these problems in a new panel survey of 1500 commuters in San Diego, California. These data are collected to evaluate charging solo commuters to use an existing 8-mile underutilized freeway carpool lane. We illustrate the impact of attrition and measurement error on a standard conditional logit model of commuters’ mode choice (solo drive in free lanes, pay to solo drive in the carpool lanes, or carpool for free in carpool lanes). Although the attrition rate between waves is 40% and non-ignorable, the quantitative impact on the results is negligible. However, measurement error in travel time does have an important impact on the key results from our model. Finally, failure to account for the measurement error process using multiple imputations yields a downward bias of at least 50% in the standard errors of the logit coefficient estimates.

Suggested Citation
David Brownstone, Thomas F. Golob and Camilla Kazimi (1999) Modeling Non-Ignorable Attrition and Measurement Error in Panel Surveys: An Application to Travel Demand Modeling. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-99-5. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4xd7b26q.

conference paper

Current challenges for intermodal freight transport and logistics in Europe and the United States

Intermodal freight transportation; freight transportation planning

Publication Date

January 1, 2004

Author(s)

KG Zografos, Amelia Regan

Abstract

The current issues and challenges related to the large-scale implementation of intermodal freight transportation systems in the United States and Europe are addressed, and open research issues and challenges are identified. As congestion and environmental impacts continue to worsen, intermodal transportation will continue to increase in importance. Therefore, it is necessary to establish a research agenda for an in-depth study of intermodal freight and logistics issues in the European Union and the United States.

Suggested Citation
KG Zografos and AC Regan (2004) “Current challenges for intermodal freight transport and logistics in Europe and the United States”, in Intermodal freight transportation; freight transportation planning. TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH BOARD NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL (Transportation research record), pp. 70–78.

conference paper

An initial investigation of protocol customization

Proceedings of the 2017 workshop on forming an ecosystem around software transformation - FEAST '17

Publication Date

January 1, 2017

Author(s)

David Ke Hong, Qi Alfred Chen, Z. Morley Mao
Suggested Citation
David Ke Hong, Qi Alfred Chen and Z. Morley Mao (2017) “An initial investigation of protocol customization”, in Proceedings of the 2017 workshop on forming an ecosystem around software transformation - FEAST '17. ACM Press, pp. 57–64. Available at: 10.1145/3141235.3141236.

Phd Dissertation

Combinatorial auctions: Applications in freight transportation contract procurement

Publication Date

June 30, 2003

Abstract

This dissertation focuses on the development of optimization methods and approximation algorithms for combinatorial auctions, particularly with application to the contract procurement problem in freight transportation. Combinatorial auctions are auctions in which a set of heterogeneous items are sold simultaneously and in which bidders can bid for their preferred combinations of items. They involve many difficult optimization problems both for auction hosts and bidders and have received significant attention from computer scientists, operations researchers and economists recently. Large shippers (typically manufacturing companies or retailers) have begun to use this method to procure services from trucking companies and logistics services providers. This dissertation first analyzes the economic impact of combinatorial auction-based procurement methods both on shippers and carriers using a simulation study and reveals that both parties can benefit from this economically efficient price discovery mechanism. While the majority of prior research has been from an auctioneer’s perspective, we demonstrate that bidders have even more complicated optimization problems in combinatoiral auctions. The bid construction problem, that is, how bidders should identify and construct beneficial bids, is very hard and remains an open question. This dissertation investigates this problem and proposes an optimization based approximation method that involves solving an NP-hard problem only once, yielding significant improvements in computational efficiency. Further, the current state of trucking and third party logistics industries are examined. The trucking industry is very competitive and small carriers are operating under thin margins. This dissertation addresses these issues by proposing an auction based collaborative carrier network in which participating carriers can identify inefficient lanes from daily operations quickly and exchange them with partners under an auction protocol. This system is proved to be Pareto efficient. Further, decision problems are discussed regarding how carriers should identify inefficient operations and how to make and select bids. This represents an effort to use advanced auction mechanisms to enhance the carriers’ operational efficiencies.

Suggested Citation
Jiongjiong Song (2003) Combinatorial auctions: Applications in freight transportation contract procurement. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991035093498004701.