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Paper
Published: 2015
Journal/Book: Journal of Intelligent Transportation Systems: Technology, Planning, and Operations
Summary:
Truck probe data collected by global positioning system (GPS) devices has gained increased attention as a source of truck mobility data, including measuring truck travel time reliability. Most reliability studies that apply GPS data are based on travel time observations retrieved from GPS data. The major challenges to using GPS data are small, nonrandom observation sets and low reading frequency.
Article
Published: 2014
Journal/Book: Institute of Transportation Engineers. ITE Journal,
Summary:
Global positioning system (GPS) devices that are installed in trucks and used for fleet management are increasingly common. Raw data from these devices present an opportunity for public agencies to use these trucks as probe vehicles to better monitor roadway operations and to quantify transportation system efficiency.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Erica Wygonik, Daniel H. Rowe
Journal/Book: Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Journal
Summary:
Decisions to install public bike-share programs are increasingly based on ridership estimations, but the topography’s influence on ridership is rarely quantified. This research evaluated a geographic information system-based approach for estimating ridership that accounted for hills. Double-weighting a slope relative to other measures produces a realistic representation of the bicycling experience.
Technical Report
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Erica Wygonik, B. Starr McMullen, Daniel Holder
Journal/Book: Oregon Department of Transportation, Research Section
Summary:
As available data has increased and as the national transportation funding bills have moved toward objective evaluation, departments of transportation (DOTs) throughout the country have begun to develop tools to measure the impacts of different projects. Increasingly, DOTs recognize the freight transportation system is necessarily multimodal. However, few DOTs have clearly stated objective tools to make multimodal freight project comparisons.
Keywords:
Multimodal
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Jerome Drescher
Journal/Book: Pacific Northwest Transportation Consortium (PacTrans)
Summary:
This paper describes the population characteristics in the drayage trucking population of the Port of Seattle as determined by the 2013 Truck Driver Survey. The 2013 Truck Driver Survey was created to give the Port of Seattle more information on the trip destinations, working conditions, equipment, and economics of truck drivers serving the Port of Seattle, so that policymakers creating regulations affecting trucking at the port could be better informed about the trucking population.
Report
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Mark Hallenbeck, Jerome Drescher
Journal/Book: The State of Washington Department of Transportation
Summary:
This report discusses the travel costs associated with the closure of roads in the greater Centralia/Chehalis, Washington region due to 100-year flood conditions starting on the Chehalis River. The costs were computed for roadway closures on I-5, US 12, and SR 6, and are based on estimated road closure durations supplied by WSDOT. The computed costs are only those directly related to travel that would otherwise have occurred on the roads affected by the flooding closures.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Jinhyun Honga
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment
Summary:
This study employs a multilevel model to compare the influence of land use on transportation emissions in urban and suburban areas when considering trip speed and vehicle characteristics.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2014
Summary:
The Port of Seattle surveyed drayage truckers serving the port in 2006, 2008, and surveyed drivers again in 2013 in partnership with the University of Washington. This thesis describes the methodology used to survey drayage drivers at the Port of Seattle, describes the economic conditions of drayage drivers at the port and changes in economic conditions since previous surveys, and attempts to model driver earnings based on other driver characteristics.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2014
Summary:
Worldwide, awareness has been raised about the dangers of growing greenhouse gas emissions. In the United States, transportation is a key contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. American and European researchers have identified a potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by replacing passenger vehicle travel with delivery service.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2014
Summary:
Efficient and reliable goods movement via our nation’s highway system is critical to the nation’s economy and quality of life. Truck mobility is one of the key performance measures for evaluating the conditions of goods movement and supporting freight planning. Truck GPS data can be useful in developing truck mobility measures and providing insights into freight planning.
Technical Report
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Erica Wygonik
Journal/Book: Pacific Northwest Transportation Consortium (PacTrans)
Summary:
While researchers have found relationships between passenger vehicle travel and smart growth development patterns, similar relationships have not been extensively studied between urban form and goods movement trip-making patterns. In rural areas, where shopping choice is more limited, goods movement delivery has the potential to be relatively more important than in more urban areas.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne GoodchildDr. Ed McCormack, Alon Bassok
Journal/Book: TR News
Summary:
Smart growth design, a strategy for improving the quality of life in urban areas, has typically focused on the areas of passenger travel, land use and nonmotorized transport adoption. The role of goods movement is often ignored in discussions of smart growth. This article reports on National Cooperative Freight Research Program (NCFRP) Report 24, which addresses the importance of the relationship between smart growth and goods movement.
Keywords:
Smart growth
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Maura Rowell, Andrea Gagliano
Journal/Book: Research in Transportation Business & Management
Summary:
Travel demand models are used to aid infrastructure investment and transportation policy decisions. Unfortunately, these models were built primarily to reflect passenger travel and most models in use by public agencies have poorly developed freight components. Freight transportation is an important piece of regional planning, so regional models should be improved to more accurately capture freight traffic.
Chapter
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Erica Wygonik
Journal/Book: Sustainable Logistics: Transport and Sustainability (Emerald Group Publishing Limited)
Summary:
This chapter provides additional insight into the role of warehouse location in achieving sustainability targets and provides a novel comparison between delivery and personal travel for criteria pollutants.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Wenjuan Zhao
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
This paper quantifies the benefits to drayage trucks and container terminals from a data-sharing strategy designed to improve operations at the drayage truck-container terminal interface. This paper proposes a simple rule for using truck information to reduce container rehandling work and suggests a method for evaluating yard crane productivity and truck transaction time.