published journal article

Slums in Brazil: Where are they located, who lives in them, and do they `squeeze' the formal housing market?

Journal of Housing Economics

Publication Date

June 1, 2019

Author(s)

Jan Brueckner, Lucas Mation, Vanessa G. Nadalin

Abstract

Making use of data from the Brazilian Census, this paper presents descriptive evidence on Brazilian slums while attempting to test the squeezing hypothesis from the squatting literature. A comparison of mean values for a host of household and neighborhood variables often shows wide, and usually predictable, differences in values between neighborhoods designated as slums by the Census and nonslum neighborhoods that lack this designation. The paper presents a variety of descriptive regressions making use of these rich data, while providing evidence consistent with the squeezing hypothesis in city-level regressions showing that a higher population share or land share in slums leads to higher formal rents.

Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner, Lucas Mation and Vanessa G. Nadalin (2019) “Slums in Brazil: Where are they located, who lives in them, and do they `squeeze' the formal housing market?”, Journal of Housing Economics, 44, pp. 48–60. Available at: 10.1016/j.jhe.2019.02.003.

conference paper

An on-line data repository for statewide freight planning and analysis

Proceedings of the 90th annual meeting of the transportation research board, washington, DC

Publication Date

January 1, 2011
Suggested Citation
A. Tok, M.Y. Zhao, J.Y.J. Chow, S.G. Ritchie and D. Arkhipov (2011) “An on-line data repository for statewide freight planning and analysis”, in Proceedings of the 90th annual meeting of the transportation research board, washington, DC.

published journal article

Introduction: Special issue on engineering economics and sustainable systems

The Engineering Economist

Publication Date

July 1, 2016

Author(s)

K. Jo Min, Jean-Daniel Saphores, Valerie M. Thomas
Suggested Citation
K. Jo Min, Jean-Daniel Saphores and Valerie M. Thomas (2016) “Introduction: Special issue on engineering economics and sustainable systems”, The Engineering Economist, 61(3), pp. 161–162. Available at: 10.1080/0013791x.2016.1213342.

working paper

Court Intervention, the Consent Decree and the Century Freeway

Publication Date

August 1, 1991

Author(s)

Joseph Dimento, Jace Baker, Robert Detlefson, Dru van Hengel, Brenda Nordenstam

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-91-9, UCTC 381

Abstract

In 1972, a lawsuit. Keith v, Volpe. stopped implementation of the Century Freeway project and resulted in an injunction. By that time approximately 18,000 people had been displaced from the Century Freeway corridor. By the terms of the lawsuit, the then Division of Highways was required to develop a formal environmental impact statement on the entire Century Freeway project and to carry our additional public hearings. In 1979 parties to the lawsuit entered into a consent decree, amended two years later, which laid out the terms under which-the project would go forward. This injunction and consent decree were employed during a period of considerable regulatory and social change which nationwide was affecting the completion of public works projects, highways in particular. The period of the Century Freeway’s early years has been called the time of the freeway revolution. Whatever it is labelled, it provided a context for interpretation of and response to the Century Freeway lawsuit and consent decree. The context involved: – legal changes (environmental, transportation and housing law enactments, enhanced access to judicial review of administrative agency actions, codification of the gains of the civil rights movement); – social changes (increasing environmental awareness, the public interest law movement, demands for greater participation in the workplace by women and minorities); – economic and political changes (adoption of a federal Urban Initiatives Program, changing leadership at Caltrans, decreased gasoline tax revenues because of the Arab oil embargo and the use of fuel-efficient vehicles). This report presents the results of a two year study of the Century Freeway undertaken under a Research Technical Agreement between UCI and Caltrans.

Suggested Citation
Joseph F. DiMento, Jace Baker, Robert Detlefson, Dru van Hengel and Brenda Nordenstam (1991) Court Intervention, the Consent Decree and the Century Freeway. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-91-9, UCTC 381. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9qj0m7w5.

Phd Dissertation

Modeling individual route choice with automated real -time vehicle trip histories

Abstract

Collecting rich individual trip data at an individual level has long been viewed as a hard task and has become a bottleneck in modeling and calibrating travel behavior models since traditional survey methods are both costly and time-consuming. New technologies make such data a possibility and thus there is a need for frameworks that model individual behavior in real-time using such data. Such modeling will find use in a variety of real-time network optimization and prediction schemes. This dissertation describes the details of plausible behavioral modeling of this kind, and develops new data structures that are needed both for handling the network combinatorics in the analysis and in the data storage. The work is presented in the context of a new technology we propose called the Persistent Traffic Cookie (PTC) system which uses the short range wireless connection between vehicles and road side controllers to store authenticated, time-stamped node sequences on an onboard database. The dissertation makes the premise that traditional travel behavior models, including those based on disaggregate decision paradigms were developed primarily for application in aggregate level prediction and are thus not very applicable for an individual’s route choice prediction in real-time. A scheme that does not require variation of explanatory variables across the choice sets or variation in the individual’s decisions for calibration may be essential. Thus the dissertation developed models based on observed frequencies of decisions. The research also stresses the importance of path and sub-path notions in route choice decisions and provides appropriate data structures that enable modeling with such notions. Two methods that directly query the collected sequence data using efficient data structures based on the suffix tree and the suffix array schemes and node/edge transition probability model, are proposed to predict individual travels from trip diary database. A day-to-day PTC simulation framework with behavior components is proposed to generate consistent PTC data and implemented in Paramics microscopic traffic simulator. Day-to-day PTC simulations are carried out for two Paramics networks, including the Irvine Triangle network, which is a well-calibrated real world network. Various scenarios are created to test the sensitivities of the proposed prediction methods. The simulation results shows that it seems the prediction methods are robust with regard to the underlying behavior models, traffic conditions and tracking periods.

Suggested Citation
Yu Zhang (2006) Modeling individual route choice with automated real -time vehicle trip histories. Ph.D.. University of California, Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/1gpb62p/alma991035092986404701 (Accessed: October 14, 2023).

published journal article

TileChain: A Blockchain-Based Framework for Security Service Management For Vehicular Communications

IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology

Publication Date

January 1, 2024

Author(s)

Ahmed Didouh, Anthony Lopez, Houda Labiod, Yassin El Hillali, Atika Rivenq, Mohammad Al Faruque

Abstract

Vehicular communications have become essential for functional and road safety purposes due to the development of vehicle fleets. However, these communications have made vehicles more vulnerable to cyber-attacks. The security of data exchanges in vehicular networks currently relies on a centralized architecture that is responsible for managing various security services such as authentication, confidentiality, non-repudiation, real-time misbehavior detection, certificate management and revocation. However, this centralized approach can be challenging and costly for authorities, and it may even weaken the network’s overall security. In this paper, we propose a complementary solution that uses a decentralized security framework to help authorities better manage their network security by involving each vehicle in the overall security management. Our framework, TileChain, is blockchain based solution that use road information to manage the network’s security dynamically. The architecture is designed to optimize any security service efficiently. To demonstrate the feasibility and performance of our proposed solution, we selected certificate revocation as a critical service and performed simulations using real vehicle traffic data provided by The French road operator DIR Nord. Our Smart Contract achieved an accuracy of 81.3% in misbehavior detection, leading to certificate revocation. Furthermore, the computation load for security management by authorities potentially reduced by a factor of 96.8%. In summary, our proposed solution, TileChain, offers a promising decentralized approach for managing vehicular network security that can potentially improve the overall security of the network while reducing the computational burden on authorities.

Suggested Citation
Ahmed Didouh, Anthony Bahadir Lopez, Houda Labiod, Yassin El Hillali, Atika Rivenq and Mohammad Abdullah Al Faruque (2024) “TileChain: A Blockchain-Based Framework for Security Service Management For Vehicular Communications”, IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology, pp. 1–17. Available at: 10.1109/TVT.2024.3358784.

working paper

A Survey and Analysis of Energy Intensity Estimates for Urban Transportation Modes

Abstract

The current interest in energy conservation has resulted in a spate of divergent estimates of the energy intensiveness (EI) of urban transit modes. This paper critically reviews the methodologies and data sources employed by these estimates. It is shown that a very small repertory of sources and methodologies underlie the EI estimates, and that variance among them is primarily attributable to contradictory load factor assumptions. El estimates for bus and rail transit are developed, and the inadequacies of automobile data are discussed. Buses are shown to be more efficient than rail transit, and it is shown that light rail’s energy advantage over heavy rail lies in construction, not operation.

Suggested Citation
Kenneth M. Chomitz (1978) A Survey and Analysis of Energy Intensity Estimates for Urban Transportation Modes. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-78-14. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5577d1gr.

Phd Dissertation

Walking and urban form: Modeling and testing parental decisions about children's travel

Abstract

Over the past several years, the private vehicle has become the predominant mode of travel to school while walking and bicycling rates have decreased. Some suggest that this change in travel behavior contributes to negative health outcomes in children, including increased rates of (1) overweight/obesity through inactivity and (2) pedestrian and bicyclist fatality and injury. A series of recent policies and programs directly attribute the change in travel behavior to school to the urban form of communities. Limited research exists to support this hypothesis, however. The fundamental questions of whether and how urban form impacts a child’s trip to school must to be answered in order to develop effective interventions aimed at increasing rates of walking and bicycling activity and safety. This research proposes a conceptual framework to examine the nature and shape of the relationships between urban form; interpersonal, demographic and social/cultural factors; parental decision-making and a child’s travel to school. Using parent survey data on children’s travel to school and urban design assessments from twelve elementary school neighborhoods, the relative influence of urban form on the mode choice to school was first determined. Results indicate that urban form elements such as street lights and street widths do affect the probability of a child walking or bicycling to school; however, the affect of these elements is modest compared to other influential variables such as the perceived convenience of driving, country of birth, family support of walking behavior, reported traffic conditions in the neighborhood and perceived distances between home and school. A second analysis examined how urban form and children’s travel behavior relate by testing the hypothesis of an indirect relationship. The findings show that parent’s feelings of neighborhood safety, traffic safety and/or household transportation options do not intervene in the relationship between urban form and children’s travel behavior. Socio-demographic characteristics and parent’s attitudes toward travel, however, may modify the strength of the relationship between urban form and children’s travel behavior. The results of this study advance the discussion on relationships between urban form, transportation and health and inform policy and practice of the best targets for future planning interventions.

Suggested Citation
Tracey Elizabeth McMillan (2003) Walking and urban form: Modeling and testing parental decisions about children's travel. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991035093496804701.

published journal article

Innovative single-loop speed estimation model with advanced loop data

IET Intelligent Transport Systems

Publication Date

December 3, 2010
Suggested Citation
S. Park and S.G. Ritchie (2010) “Innovative single-loop speed estimation model with advanced loop data”, IET Intelligent Transport Systems, 4(4), pp. 232–243. Available at: 10.1049/iet-its.2009.0126.

working paper

The Perceived Usefulness of Different Sources of Traffic Information to Trucking Operations

Abstract

Managers in charge of the California operations of nearly 1,200 trucking companies were asked their opinions regarding how useful various sources of traffic information are to their dispatchers and to their drivers. They were also asked to evaluate the usefulness of improved traveler information systems. Nonlinear canonical correlation analysis was used to link company characteristics and perceptions of the value of the sources. Results showed that evaluations of sources such as Internet traffic information, in-vehicle navigation systems, and area-wide dedicated highway advisory radio are primarily related to the location of operations, whether a trucking operation is private or for-hire, the average length of the company’s load moves, and the provision of intermodal services.