working paper

Comparing the Influence of Land Use on Nonwork Trip Generation and Vehicle Distance Traveled: An Analysis using Travel Diary Data

Publication Date

August 1, 2003

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-03-8

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

This study uses two-day travel diary data to examine whether land use matters more for an individual’s trip generation or for an individual’s total vehicle miles traveled (VMT). More specifically, sociodemographic, land use, and street connectivity variables are used to estimate nonwork trip frequency and nonwork vehicle miles traveled via ordered probit and ordinary least-squares regression models. We compare standardized coefficients of the models and conclude that: (1) the influence of land use variables is similar in both the trip generation and VMT regressions; and (2) income is the primary determinant of both trip frequency and VMT, but that land use exerts an influence that is on par with other sociodemographic characteristics after the primary role of income is considered.

Suggested Citation
Marlon G. Boarnet, K.S. Nesamani and C. Scott Smith (2003) Comparing the Influence of Land Use on Nonwork Trip Generation and Vehicle Distance Traveled: An Analysis using Travel Diary Data. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-03-8. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/50v4j7nb.

conference paper

An implementation-ready approach for multiple-van multi-criteria dynamic demand rebalancing at bike-share stations

Proceedings of the 97th annual meeting of the transportation research board

Abstract

Bike-sharing programs are increasingly popular as an effective way to enhance walk, transit, ride sharing, and car sharing accessibility. One common challenge is to find an efficient bike rebalancing strategy when pick-up and drop-off demands at bike stations are not evenly distributed in space and time. The goal of the rebalancing operation is to improve service level and reduce unsatisfied demand. Most, if not all, existing methods adopt approaches with adjustments based on spatial clustering and conventional network analysis techniques with a single criterion. This paper provides a ready-to-implement alternative to resolve the rebalancing problem with high model interpretability and tractability. The core concept of the proposed algorithm evolves from an observation that the solution set can be formed as a set of pickup-dropoff station pairs rather than individual stations. An unsupervised learning approach is used for parameter estimation and validation. The objective function assigns weights to the cost of the bike-redistribution van operation and the cost for unsatisfied demand. The algorithm contains three general steps with feedback. The first step converts the dynamic problem into a static problem using discounting method for dynamic demand; the second step assigns bike station pairs and finds the routing of each van stochastically; the third step converts the static problem back to dynamic to determine detailed operation variables such as the exact number of bikes to serve. Heuristic search and random perturbation for bike pair sequence is utilized to avoid the solutionsâ?? being trapped at local optima. The final validation using a training dataset and other data shows no overfitting problem for the models, and the results are consistent and efficient.

Suggested Citation
Jiangbo Gabriel Yu, Dingtong Yang, Daisik Nam, Sunghi An and R. Jayakrishnan (2018) “An implementation-ready approach for multiple-van multi-criteria dynamic demand rebalancing at bike-share stations”, in Proceedings of the 97th annual meeting of the transportation research board, p. 3p.

published journal article

Decentralized road investment and pricing in a congested, multi-jurisdictional city: Efficiency with spillovers

NTJ

Publication Date

July 1, 2015

Author(s)

Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner (2015) “Decentralized road investment and pricing in a congested, multi-jurisdictional city: Efficiency with spillovers”, NTJ, 68(3S), pp. 839–854. Available at: 10.17310/ntj.2015.3s.05.

working paper

Safety of Freeway Median High Occupancy Vehicle Lanes: A Comparison of Aggregate and Disaggregate Analyses

Publication Date

September 5, 1989

Author(s)

Thomas Golob, Will Recker, Douglas W. Levine

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-89-2

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

This paper addresses safety issues associated with High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes constructed along freeway medians, without physical separation from adjacent traffic. Data associated with operation of such an HOV facility in Southern California are analyzed relative to the pattern of accidents on the facility and the potential role of congestion. Detailed analyses of accident characteristics point out that potentially false conclusions regarding the safety of HOV lanes can be drawn from simple analyses that are based on aggregate measures of accident frequencies and assumed traffic volumes. 

Suggested Citation
Thomas F. Golob, Will Recker and Douglas W. Levine (1989) Safety of Freeway Median High Occupancy Vehicle Lanes: A Comparison of Aggregate and Disaggregate Analyses. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-89-2. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2qc2f7zx.

Preprint Journal Article

Optimal Fare Policy and Fleet Sizing for an Integrated Fixed-Route Transit and Microtransit System

Abstract

Integrating microtransit with fixed-route transit (FRT) can improve travelers’ mobility by leveraging the benefits of microtransit’s flexibility and FRT’s high passenger capacity. However, the high operating cost of microtransit presents a challenge, which calls for a careful evaluation of the trade-offs between mobility gains and operational cost. To address this need, this paper develops a modeling approach and solution procedure to identify Pareto-optimal designs. We focus on design parameters of practical interest, namely, fare policies and microtransit fleet size. To explore these trade-offs, we propose a bi-level and bi-objective (i.e., minimize taxpayer subsidy and maximize mobility-based consumer welfare) modeling framework, with an agent-based transportation system simulation model at the lower level and a multi-objective Bayesian Optimization (BO) model at the upper level. We apply the modeling and solution approach to Lemon Grove, California (a suburban area in San Diego County). Results reveal a diverse set of solutions along the Pareto frontier, indicating that some naive microtransit fare strategies are suboptimal. Notably, Pareto-optimal designs feature a 50-100% discount for microtransit to FRT transfers, as well as peak-period fare multipliers between 1.8x and 3.5x to manage time-varying demand effectively.

Suggested Citation
Ritun Saha, Siwei Hu and Michael Hyland (2025) “Optimal Fare Policy and Fleet Sizing for an Integrated Fixed-Route Transit and Microtransit System”. Rochester, NY: Social Science Research Network. Available at: 10.2139/ssrn.5382012.

conference paper

An empirical study of inter-vehicle communication performance using NS-2

Proceedings of the 17th ITS world congress, busan, south Korea

Abstract

In recent years, there has been increasing interest in inter-vehicle communications (IVC) based on wireless networks to collect and distribute traffic information in various Intelligent Transportation Systems applications. In this paper, we study the performance of IVC under various traffic and communication conditions by means of simulation analysis. We consider impacts of shock waves, transportation network, traffic densities, transmission ranges, and multiple information sources. We used a state-of-the-art communication network simulator ns-2 to measure success rate and message delivery ratio (MDR) for flooding-based IVC communication. For reasonable realism in the deployment scenario, we assume that only a partial set of vehicles on the road are equipped with communication devices, according to the market penetration rate. A Monte-Carlo simulation method is used with repeated random sampling of IVC-equipped vehicles. The results indicate how these parameters can impact the performance of IVC communications. By comparing the flooding-based approach (theoretical and simulation) and simulation results using AODV (Ad Hoc On-Demand Distance Vector), we conclude the importance of traffic environment and network protocol for IVC communication.

Suggested Citation
Jaeyoung Jung, Rex Chen, Wenlong Jin, R. Jayakrishnan and Amelia C. Regan (2010) “An empirical study of inter-vehicle communication performance using NS-2”, in Proceedings of the 17th ITS world congress, busan, south Korea, p. 12p. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/874253j6?conferencePaper.

working paper

High Occupancy / Toll Lanes: Phasing in Congestion Pricing a Lane at a Time

Publication Date

November 1, 1993

Associated Project

Author(s)

Gordon (Pete) Fielding, Daniel B. Klein

Working Paper

UCTC No. 179

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

A consensus is emerging among transportation economists that the best way to deal with freeway congestion is to charge for driving during peak hours. The main barrier to implementation is political: drastic change is politically unpopular. This paper proposes a way of overcoming the political obstacles by phasing in congestion pricing over a period of many years.

Suggested Citation
Gordon J. Fielding and Daniel B. Klein (1993) High Occupancy / Toll Lanes: Phasing in Congestion Pricing a Lane at a Time. Working Paper UCTC No. 179. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2fv1c5p3.

research report

High coverage point to point transit (HCPPT): A new design concept and Simulation–Evaluation of operational schemes

Publication Date

January 1, 2005
Suggested Citation
R Jayakrishnan, Cristian E Cortes, Laia Pages, Riju Lavanya and Amelia C Regan (2005) High coverage point to point transit (HCPPT): A new design concept and Simulation–Evaluation of operational schemes.

Phd Dissertation

Technology, Trade and the Environment

Publication Date

August 20, 2015

Author(s)

Abstract

The three chapters in this dissertation use firm-level data from Vietnam, Chile, and a set of Eastern-European countries to understand the importance of foreign direct investment in technology diffusion and subsequent environmental implications of changes in the production process. Chapter 1 investigates whether increased within-firm or within-industry foreign exposure, or foreign exposure from domestic downstream industry increases technology adoption. Chapters 2 and 3 look beyond technology spillovers of foreign investment, considering whether increased foreign investment affects domestic firm energy intensities. Chapter 2 studies whether domestic Vietnamese firms that become suppliers of domestic foreign-owned firms experience differential technology adoption and changes in energy intensity. Chapter 3 studies whether increased within-firm or within-industry foreign exposure, or foreign exposure from domestic downstream industry in Chile affects firm-level energy intensities. Studying manufacturing and service firms in Eastern-European countries, Chapter 1 finds that technology gains from domestic foreign exposure differ between lower-income and higher-income countries. In higher-income countries, increased within-industry foreign exposure and increased foreign exposure from downstream industries on average increases technology adoption. Studying Vietnamese manufacturing firms, Chapter 2 finds that firms that become suppliers of domestic foreign firms are on average more likely to have innovated than their non-supplier peers. These technology gains are found not to translate into short-run changes in energy intensity. Studying Chilean manufacturing firms, Chapter 3 finds as firms experience increased within-firm foreign investment, they on average increase their electricity intensity. Moreover, increased within-industry foreign exposure on average increases electricity intensity for all firms, and fuel intensity for firms in “dirty” industries.

Suggested Citation
PAUL STROIK (2015) Technology, Trade and the Environment. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0wf139z9.

working paper

Automobile Driving and Aggressive Behavior: Effects of Multiple Disinhibitory Influences

Publication Date

April 1, 1988

Author(s)

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-88-4

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

Automobiles and aggressive behavior have an extensive association, ranging from themes of dominance and territoriality to flagrant assaultive actions. A broad range of aggressive behaviors in the context of driving can be understood in terms of the disinhibition of aggression through multiple influence channels. The paper discusses the disinhibitory factors of physiological arousal, traffic context, cognitive scripts, and contagion mechanisms. Some results of two preliminary surveys concerning roadway aggression (victimization and perpetration) are presented which suggest that such occurrences are more prevalent than commonly acknowledged. 

Suggested Citation
Raymond W. Novaco (1988) Automobile Driving and Aggressive Behavior: Effects of Multiple Disinhibitory Influences. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-88-4. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2sn3r2t4.