published journal article

The automotive future belongs to fuel cells range, adaptability, and refueling time will ultimately put hydrogen fuel cells ahead of batteries

IEEE Spectrum

Publication Date

February 1, 2017

Author(s)

Suggested Citation
G. Scott Samuelsen (2017) “The automotive future belongs to fuel cells range, adaptability, and refueling time will ultimately put hydrogen fuel cells ahead of batteries”, IEEE Spectrum, 54(2), pp. 38–43. Available at: 10.1109/mspec.2017.7833504.

policy brief

What are the Public Health and Environmental Implications of Drayage Truck Electrification Targets in California?

Abstract

To better understand the implications of transitioning drayage trucks to zero-emission, this project analyzed the health impacts and GHG freeway emissions from diesel-powered drayage trucks and the benefits of replacing them with zero-emission trucks, accounting for current and expected air quality regulations. The study area stretched between the San Pedro Bay and the Inland Empire, home to large warehouse complexes. It focused on two years: 2012 (when pre-2007 drayage trucks were phased out in the Clean Air Action Plan), and 2035 (the deadline in Executive Order N-79-20). The analyses incorporated projections of the size and composition of the vehicle fleets from data collected by the California Air Resources Board (CARB), estimates of future emission factors from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that account for projected technology improvements, and projected increases in cargo demand at the ports in 2035 compared to 2012.

Suggested Citation
Monica Ramirez-Ibarra and Jean-Daniel Saphores (2025) What are the Public Health and Environmental Implications of Drayage Truck Electrification Targets in California?. Policy Brief. UC ITS. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7922/g2b27sp7.

working paper

An Activity-Based Approach to Accessibility

Publication Date

September 5, 1997

Associated Project

Working Paper

UCI-ITS-WP-97-8, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-97-1

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

This paper presents the initial formulation of an activity-based model structure to address deficiencies in traditional measures of individual accessibility and which incorporates temporal transference effects of alternative travel behaviors within a household to form an index sensitive to such effects. A network-based activity assignment protocol is developed for complex travel activity decisions within a household. The research incorporates routing, scheduling, household activity assignment, and ride-sharing components into a hybrid model that explicitly captures the interactions between household members and integrates mode availability, ride-sharing behavior, and time window constraints. In this approach, individual accessibility can be estimated and aggregated to reflect accessibility within a household under alternative transportation supply environments. Prior research on such accessibility approaches suggests that the proposed extensions can be applied to estimate the impacts of changes in transportation and land development policies; the usefulness of this approach in such analysis is demonstrated by its application to selected case studies based on data derived from the Portland, Oregon Activity and Travel Behavior Survey.

Suggested Citation
Chienho Chen, Will Recker and Michael G. McNally (1997) An Activity-Based Approach to Accessibility. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-97-8, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-97-1. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8tw941h5.

working paper

Collecting Activity Data from GPS

Publication Date

August 1, 2002

Abstract

GPS recording devices offer a painless way to collect travel data, but are not directly useful to a standard activity survey. This paper documents one method for linking activities with location data. Based on a small but extended pilot survey, a technique has been developed to estimate the most likely activity at a destination, based on the respondents’ past responses. If destinations and activities were randomly paired, this information would be irrelevant. But the pilot survey also demonstrated that activities are tightly clustered in space.

Suggested Citation
James E. Marca, Craig R. Rindt and Michael G. McNally (2002) Collecting Activity Data from GPS. Working Paper UCI-ITS-WP-02-14, UCI-ITS-AS-WP-02-14. Institute of Transportation Studies, Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8rn6180p.

conference paper

Client-side name collision vulnerability in the new gTLD era. A Systematic Study

Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC conference on computer and communications security

Publication Date

October 1, 2017

Author(s)

Qi Alfred Chen, Matthew Thomas, Eric Osterweil, Yulong Cao, Jie You, Z. Morley Mao
Suggested Citation
Qi Alfred Chen, Matthew Thomas, Eric Osterweil, Yulong Cao, Jie You and Z. Morley Mao (2017) “Client-side name collision vulnerability in the new gTLD era. A Systematic Study”, in Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC conference on computer and communications security. ACM, pp. 941–956. Available at: 10.1145/3133956.3134084.

published journal article

Estimating unmet travel needs using secondary data sources

Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board

Publication Date

January 1, 1988
Suggested Citation
M. G. McNally, W. W. Recker and Roger F. Teal (1988) “Estimating unmet travel needs using secondary data sources”, Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board, (1202), pp. 88–98. Available at: https://onlinepubs.trb.org/Onlinepubs/trr/1988/1202/1202-012.pdf.

published journal article

A Methodology for Planning and Prioritisation of Rural Roads in Bangladesh

Sustainability

Publication Date

February 18, 2022

Author(s)

Md. Musleh Uddin Hasan, A S M Abdul Quium, Md Mashrur Rahman, Farzana Khatun, Mohammad Shakil Akther, Afsana Haque, Sarwar Jahan, Ishrat Islam, Tanjeeb Ahmed, Tanvir Hossain Shubho

Abstract

Local government bodies and other concerned agencies in developing countries spend a considerable amount of money on rural road development. However, in the absence of any robust and systematic methodology, road development largely relies on ad-hoc decisions and subjective judgement of public officials. Such a decision-making process often leads to inefficient resource allocation bypassing equity and long-term societal benefits. Although there are some established methodologies for road network planning, complexities exist in applying those methods. First, most of the established methods are not suitable for rural road development, particularly regarding the volume and nature of traffic on them. Second, some methods are highly complex and lack practical applicability. Third, road development planning should not be top-down alone but ensure the participation of local stakeholders. Given these limitations, this study proposes a methodology—Rural Road Planning and Prioritisation Model (RPPM). It consists of two major components (i) developing a core network in participation with local stakeholders and (ii) prioritisation of roads based on Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) and Multi-Criteria Analysis (MCA). The proposed method is piloted in one district, and a web-based software is also developed for practical implementation by the Local Government Engineering Department (LGED), Bangladesh. The paper also discusses the results of the pilot study.

Suggested Citation
Md. Musleh Uddin Hasan, A S M Abdul Quium, Mashrur Rahman, Farzana Khatun, Mohammad Shakil Akther, Afsana Haque, Sarwar Jahan, Ishrat Islam, Tanjeeb Ahmed and Tanvir Hossain Shubho (2022) “A Methodology for Planning and Prioritisation of Rural Roads in Bangladesh”, Sustainability, 14(4), p. 2337. Available at: 10.3390/su14042337.

Phd Dissertation

Integrated Modeling of Air Quality and Health Impacts of a Freight Transportation Corridor

Abstract

Due to environmental concerns, transportation studies have extensively evaluated emission impacts associated with traffic operational strategies and transportation policies. However, the impact studies mainly relied on emission impacts found using demand forecasting models. Such planning models cannot capture individual vehicles’ interactions (i.e., lane changes or stop-and-go movements) or detailed traffic operations such as with traffic signals. These limitations often lead to under-estimated emissions while evaluating several policies. Even though many studies utilized microscopic traffic models to better estimate emissions, the studies have not considered further steps such as air quality estimation and health impact studies. This research develops an integrated framework for evaluating air quality and health impacts of transportation corridors using a microscopic traffic model, a micro-scale emissions model, a non-steady state dispersion model, and a health impact model. The main advantage of this approach is to better estimate air quality and health impacts from vehicle interactions and detailed traffic management strategies. As a case study, we evaluate air quality and health impacts of several scenarios associated with major transportation corridors accessing the San Pedro Bay Ports (SPBP) complex, California. The study context consists of two 20 miles-long major freight freeway corridors and nearby arterials, as well as line-haul rail along the Alameda corridor and several rail yards associated with the SPBP complex. For the scenarios, we consider a clean truck program, cleaner locomotives, and modal shifts compared to the 2005 baseline. All scenarios performed with the integrated framework have provided larger improvements of air quality and health impacts associated with transportation corridors than conventional frameworks using transportation planning models. However, the difference in air quality and health impacts from modal shift scenarios between clean trucks and locomotives are minor. As exploratory research, pollution response surface models are developed. The main objective of the pollution response surface model is to avoid the high computational cost of the microscopic traffic model, which makes it difficult to estimate traffic for multiple days needed for evaluating emissions and health impacts over longer periods such a climate season. A conceptual framework for estimating pollution response surface models is proposed. Using a hypothetical network, response surfaces of NOX and PM are estimated.

Suggested Citation
Gunwoo Lee (2011) Integrated Modeling of Air Quality and Health Impacts of a Freight Transportation Corridor. Ph.D.. University of California, Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991012540499704701 (Accessed: October 12, 2023).

published journal article

New formulation for traveling salesman problem with separation requirement and cost

Transportation Research Record

Publication Date

January 1, 2011

Author(s)

Bruce X. Wang, Amelia Regan, Qing Miao
Suggested Citation
Bruce X. Wang, Amelia C. Regan and Qing Miao (2011) “New formulation for traveling salesman problem with separation requirement and cost”, Transportation Research Record, 2224(1), pp. 61–67. Available at: 10.3141/2224-08.

Phd Dissertation

Interactions between knowledge and practitioner communities: engagement to enhance urban social-ecological resilience

Abstract

My research focuses on the processes through which partners interact to integrate and cultivate nature in cities in order to promote healthy communities and social-ecological systems. This scholarship is timely and important given the scale of environmental change humans living in cities are driving globally. Cities both contribute to and experience changes such as increased flooding and higher temperatures, with vulnerable populations bearing the brunt of these impacts, while also having less access to the benefits that nature can provide. Cities are also highly networked places with the potential to be leaders in piloting and leveraging solutions to the world’s most pressing social-ecological challenges. Utilizing an interpretive methodology, I spent one year with a university center for urban resilience in Los Angeles, attending meetings and carrying out over 40 semi-structured interviews conducted with practitioner and knowledge community participants in the region. My dissertation explains how universities navigate their relationships with partners focusing on legitimacy, inclusion and the fluidity between the two concepts. Recommendations are provided on how to bridge legitimacy and inclusion to strategically benefit policy and planning partnership efforts. This dissertation also shows how partner narratives of urban nature are dynamic, shifting over time and diverse across space and groups. Recommendations are provided on how narratives can be a tool to better understand partner perspectives, identify synergies and divergences among narratives, and develop more inclusive policy and planning processes. This dissertation also evaluates a university led urban environmental stewardship mapping and assessment project (LA STEW-MAP), including better understanding practitioner perspectives. Recommendations are provided on how the LA STEW-MAP process can be improved to operationalize a social-ecological systems approach and as a community engagement tool.

Suggested Citation
Bemmy Jennifer Maharramov (2019) Interactions between knowledge and practitioner communities: engagement to enhance urban social-ecological resilience. PhD Dissertation. UC Irvine. Available at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8ct17879.