published journal article

Modeling spatially varying compliance effects of PM2.5 exposure reductions on gestational diabetes mellitus in southern California: Results from electronic health record data of a large pregnancy cohort

Environmental Research

Publication Date

August 15, 2023

Author(s)

John Molitor, Yi Sun, Virgilio Gómez Rubio, Tarik Benmarhnia, Jiu-Chiuan Chen, Chantal Avila, David A. Sacks, Vicki Chiu, Jeff Slezak, Darios Getahun, Jun Wu

Abstract

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a major pregnancy complication affecting approximately 14.0% of pregnancies around the world. Air pollution exposure, particularly exposure to PM2.5, has become a major environmental issue affecting health, especially for vulnerable pregnant women. Associations between PM2.5 exposure and adverse birth outcomes are generally assumed to be the same throughout a large geographical area. However, the effects of air pollution on health can very spatially in subpopulations. Such spatially varying effects are likely due to a wide range of contextual neighborhood and individual factors that are spatially correlated, including SES, demographics, exposure to housing characteristics and due to different composition of particulate matter from different emission sources. This combination of elevated environmental hazards in conjunction with socioeconomic-based disparities forms what has been described as a “double jeopardy” for marginalized sub-populations. In this manuscript our analysis combines both an examination of spatially varying effects of a) unit-changes in exposure and examines effects of b) changes from current exposure levels down to a fixed compliance level, where compliance levels correspond to the Air Quality Standards (AQS) set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and World Health Organization (WHO) air quality guideline values. Results suggest that exposure reduction policies should target certain “hotspot” areas where size and effects of potential reductions will reap the greatest rewards in terms of health benefits, such as areas of southeast Los Angeles County which experiences high levels of PM2.5 exposures and consist of individuals who may be particularly vulnerable to the effects of air pollution on the risk of GDM.

Suggested Citation
John Molitor, Yi Sun, Virgilio Gómez Rubio, Tarik Benmarhnia, Jiu-Chiuan Chen, Chantal Avila, David A. Sacks, Vicki Chiu, Jeff Slezak, Darios Getahun and Jun Wu (2023) “Modeling spatially varying compliance effects of PM2.5 exposure reductions on gestational diabetes mellitus in southern California: Results from electronic health record data of a large pregnancy cohort”, Environmental Research, 231, p. 116091. Available at: 10.1016/j.envres.2023.116091.

conference paper

Signals of opportunity aided inertial navigation

Proceedings of the 29th international technical meeting of the satellite division of the institute of navigation (ION GNSS+ 2016)

Publication Date

November 1, 2016

Author(s)

Joshua J. Morales, Paul F. Roysdon, Zaher Kassas
Suggested Citation
Joshua J. Morales, Paul F. Roysdon and Zaher M. Kassas (2016) “Signals of opportunity aided inertial navigation”, in Proceedings of the 29th international technical meeting of the satellite division of the institute of navigation (ION GNSS+ 2016). Institute of Navigation, pp. 1492–1501. Available at: 10.33012/2016.14652.

published journal article

Political fragmentation and land use changes in the Interior Plains

Population and environment

Publication Date

February 1, 2015

Author(s)

Jae Hong Kim, Jaewoo Cho, Timothy D. Keane
Suggested Citation
Jae Hong Kim, Jaewoo Cho and Timothy D. Keane (2015) “Political fragmentation and land use changes in the Interior Plains”, Population and environment, 37(1), pp. 63–82. Available at: 10.1007/s11111-015-0231-x.

blog

How a Charging-As-A-Service Model Could Support and Expand Electric Vehicle Charging Stations

Abstract

California aims to dramatically increase its electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure, but faces significant challenges. A new business model called charging-as-a-service (CaaS) could help overcome these obstacles and support the state’s ambitious climate goals.

conference paper

Simultaneous tracking of orbcomm LEO satellites and inertial navigation system aiding using Doppler measurements

2019 IEEE 89th vehicular technology conference (VTC2019-Spring)

Publication Date

April 1, 2019

Author(s)

Joshua Morales, Joe Khalife, Zaher Kassas

Abstract

A framework for simultaneously tracking Orbcomm low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites and using Doppler measurements drawn from their signals to aid a vehicle’s inertial navigation system (INS) is developed. The developed framework enables a navigating vehicle to exploit ambient Orbcomm LEO satellite signal Doppler measurements to aid its INS in a tightly-coupled fashion in the event global navigation satellite system (GNSS) signals become unusable. An overview of the extended Kalman filter-based simultaneous tracking and navigation (STAN) framework is provided. Experimental results are presented showing an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) aiding its INS with Doppler measurements drawn from two Orbcomm LEO satellites, reducing the final position error from 31.7 m to 8.9 m after 30 seconds of GNSS unavailability.

Suggested Citation
Joshua Morales, Joe Khalife and Zaher M. Kassas (2019) “Simultaneous tracking of orbcomm LEO satellites and inertial navigation system aiding using Doppler measurements”, in 2019 IEEE 89th vehicular technology conference (VTC2019-Spring). IEEE (IEEE vehicular technology conference proceedings). Available at: 10.1109/vtcspring.2019.8746485.

conference paper

A Bayesian mixture model for estimating freeway travel time distributions using small probe samples from multiple days

Proceedings of TRB 89th annual meeting, washington DC

Publication Date

January 1, 2008
Suggested Citation
K Jintanakul, L Chu and R Jayakrishnan (2008) “A Bayesian mixture model for estimating freeway travel time distributions using small probe samples from multiple days”, in Proceedings of TRB 89th annual meeting, washington DC.

book/book chapter

Chapter 1: The role of planning

Publication Date

December 12, 2023

Author(s)

Abstract

In order to address some of the most pressing problems of the twenty-first century, such as climate change and income inequality, land-use law must facilitate residential infill development – the construction of new housing and supportive infrastructure in areas with significant existing development. Planning and zoning have often been used to thwart infill development and foster urban sprawl, and this chapter explores their role in promoting infill development. It first describes the relationship between land-use planning and zoning in the US, and then discusses different scales of planning (i.e., local and regional). It then illustrates potential avenues for research on shifts in land-use law to promote infill development, with examples from the substantive domains of transportation planning and housing planning.

Suggested Citation
Nicholas J. Marantz (2023) “Chapter 1: The role of planning”. Available at: https://www.elgaronline.com/edcollchap/book/9781803928203/book-part-9781803928203-8.xml (Accessed: October 23, 2024).

published journal article

A real-time algorithm to solve the peer-to-peer ride-matching problem in a flexible ridesharing system

Transportation Research Part B: Methodological

Publication Date

December 1, 2017
Suggested Citation
Neda Masoud and R. Jayakrishnan (2017) “A real-time algorithm to solve the peer-to-peer ride-matching problem in a flexible ridesharing system”, Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, 106, pp. 218–236. Available at: 10.1016/j.trb.2017.10.006.

Phd Dissertation

Unraveling the Effects of Land Use Planning and Energy Policy on Travel Behavior

Publication Date

September 15, 2017

Author(s)

Abstract

This three-essay dissertation focuses on understanding linkages between urban form, travel behavior, ownership of alternative fuel vehicles, active commuting, congestion, fuel consumption, and air pollution (including greenhouse gas emissions). These essays estimated different specifications of Generalized Structural Equation Models (GSEM) to explicitly account for residential self-selection and vehicle choice endogeneities. The first essay analyzes the influence of land use policies and gasoline prices on driving patterns. I estimated a Generalized Structural Equation Model (GSEM) with a Tobit-link specification on a Southern California subsample of the 2009 National Household Travel Survey (NHTS). These data haves a quasi-experimental nature thanks to large exogenous variation in gasoline price during the survey period. I analyzed separately home-based work trips and non-work trips under the hypothesis that households have more flexibility to adjust their non-work trips when gasoline prices change, whereas most of the literature does not take trip purpose into account. To measure urban form, which is treated as a latent construct, I used fine-grained geospatial information including population density, land use mix, employment density, distance to employment centers and transit availability. I found that, in the short run, households drive 0.171% less for non-work trips when gasoline prices increase by 1%, while work trips are not responsive to gasoline price changes. This suggests that, in the short term, higher fuel prices reduce discretionary driving such as shopping and recreational trips, but they do not affect non-discretionary driving such as commuting trips. My results also suggest that policies that seek to increase transit service and housing opportunities near employment centers will reduce driving. The second essay investigates the impact of government incentives such as access exemption to High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes and parking privileges on household ownership of Alternative Fuel Vehicles (AFVs) using Generalized Structural Equation Models (GSEM), and accounts for residential self-selection, household demographics and ambient political-environmentalism. I analyzed geocoded travel diary data from the 2012 California Household Travel Survey (CHTS), linked with fueling station data from the US Department of Energy Alternative Fuels Data Center and precinct level election data from the UC Berkeley Statewide Database. My findings suggest that, on average, households with alternative fuel vehicles drive approximately 10 miles more on weekdays and about 0.5 miles more on non-discretionary trips than otherwise similar households. In addition, households who live closer to a freeway with HOV lanes, work closer to an AFV charging facility (that provides free parking), and are likely supportive of pro-environmental measures are more likely to own alternative fuel vehicles. The third essay examines the influence of urban form on transit use and non-motorized travel (NMT, including biking and walking) for households (with at least one employed adult) in Los Angeles and Orange Counties in California based on 2009 National Household Travel Survey (NHTS) data. The objectives of the research are (1) to assess several methods for measuring urban form features in the near-residence and near-workplace environments and (2) to assess the importance of these urban form features on transit use and NMT after accounting for the influence of these features on household vehicle ownership and residential selection. Results provide insights into the relative influence of several specifications of population density, transit access and walkability measures on transit use and NMT for commute and non-work trips. Reduced form models suggest that the dominant determinant of discretionary travel is household socio-demographic status. In terms of residential selection, lower income, younger, and smaller households are more likely to choose a dense, pedestrian friendly, and transit rich neighborhood. In terms of vehicle ownership, households living in high density, pedestrian friendly, and transit rich neighborhoods are less likely to own vehicles. After accounting for the influence of urban form on vehicle ownership and residential selection, workplace transit accessibility has greater influence on transit commuting than transit access near a household’s residence. Results vary by how urban form is specified and by the source of travel data. Finally, there is some evidence that population density affects active travel for discretionary purposes.

Suggested Citation
HARYA DILLON (2017) Unraveling the Effects of Land Use Planning and Energy Policy on Travel Behavior. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4m28823m.

published journal article

Mining activity pattern trajectories and allocating activities in the network

Transportation

Publication Date

April 1, 2015
Suggested Citation
Mahdieh Allahviranloo and Will Recker (2015) “Mining activity pattern trajectories and allocating activities in the network”, Transportation, 42(4), pp. 561–579. Available at: 10.1007/s11116-015-9602-5.