Skip to content
Sort By:
Technical Report
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Matthew Klein
Journal/Book: Transportation Northwest (TransNow)
Summary:
This research, enabled by a data collection effort at the international commercial vehicle crossing at Blaine, WA, addressed three key questions regarding commercial vehicle border operations and near border operations. First, what are the unique features of border operations at Blaine, WA, that are not captured within the standard simulation tools (such as Border Wizard)?
Technical Report
Published: 2011
Journal/Book: Washington State Transportation Center (TRAC)
Summary:
In order to support WSDOT in development of the Washington State Freight Mobility Plan, this document presents recommendations for criteria to be used in defining the Washington state truck intermodal network. The state does not have an existing definition of the freight truck-intermodal system.
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Wenjuan Zhao, Erica Wygonik
Journal/Book: Wiley Encyclopedia of Operations Research and Management Science
Summary:
This article provides an overview of the applications of operations research (OR) techniques to marine container terminals. The article begins by providing a summary of marine container terminal operations. Following this, a series of decision problems are identified, to which OR techniques have been applied. These include quayside, yard, and landside decision problems. In each section, the problems, technical approaches, and outcomes are described.
Technical Report
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Felipe Sandoval
Journal/Book: Oregon Department of Transportation, Research Section
Summary:
This research offers a novel formulation for including emissions into fleet assignment and vehicle routing and for the trade-offs faced by fleet operators between cost, emissions, and service quality. This approach enables evaluation of the impact of a variety of internal changes (e.g. time window schemes) and external policies (e.g. spatial restrictions), and enables comparisons of the relative impacts on fleet emissions.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2011
Summary:
As commercial vehicle activity grows, the environmental impacts of these movements have increasing negative effects, particularly in urban areas. The transportation sector is the largest producer of CO2 emissions in the United States, by end-use sector, accounting for 32% of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion in 2008.
Student Thesis and Dissertations
Published: 2011
Summary:
Container terminals are important intermodal interfaces between marine and land transport networks. These interfaces have historically been sources of congestion and logistical inefficiencies. Exacerbated by growing trade volumes, the terminals have become bottlenecks in the port-related supply chain. This research explores using truck arrival information to integrate drayage truck and container terminal operations and improve intermodal system efficiency.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Wenjuan Zhao
Journal/Book: Maritime Economics & Logistics
Summary:
This article will explore the reliability of the port drayage network. Port drayage is an important component of the marine intermodal system and affects the efficiency of the intermodal supply chain. Sharing and utilizing drayage truck arrival information could improve both port drayage and port operational efficiency. In this article two reliability measures are used to evaluate how the travel time reliability changes with trip origins and across drayage networks.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Erica Wygonik
Journal/Book: International Association of Traffic and Safety Sciences (IATSS)
Summary:
Growing pressure to limit greenhouse gas emissions is changing the way businesses operate. This paper presents the trade-offs between cost, service quality (represented by time window guarantees), and emissions of an urban pickup and delivery system under these changing pressures. A model, developed by the authors in ArcGIS, is used to evaluate these trade-offs for a specific case study involving a real fleet with specific operational characteristics.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Gautam Gupta, and Mark Hansen
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Part B: Methodological
Summary:
This paper presents a model for planning an air charter service for pre-scheduled group travel. This model is used to investigate the competitiveness of such an enterprise for student athlete travel in conference sports. The relevant demand subset to be served by a limited charter fleet is identified through a comparison with existing scheduled travel options. Further, the routing and scheduling of the charter aircraft is performed within the same framework.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, J. G. McCall, John Zumerchik, Jack Lanigan
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
North American rail terminals need productivity improvements to handle increasing rail volumes and improve terminal performance. This paper examines the benefits of double cycling in wide-span gantry terminals that use automated transfer management systems.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Alon Bassok
Journal/Book: Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Journal
Summary:
Despite their heavy use of the road transportation system, little data is available on trip generation rates for trucks. In this paper, truck trip rates from grocery stores are used in a case study to evaluate and compare two simple methods for collecting data on truck trip generation: telephone interviews and manual counts. The findings from this study showed that grocery stores generated an average of 18 truck trips per day on a typical peak period weekday. The results also...
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne GoodchildDr. Ed McCormack, Wenjuan Zhao
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record
Summary:
A number of trucking companies use Global Positioning System (GPS) devices for fleet management. Data extracted from these devices can provide valuable traffic information such as spot (instantaneous) speeds and vehicle trajectory. However, the accuracy of GPS spot speeds has not been fully explored, and there is concern about their use for estimating truck travel speed. This concern was addressed by initially comparing GPS spot speeds with speeds estimated from dual-loop detectors.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Xiaolei Ma, Yinhai Wang
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record
Summary:
Although trucks move larger volumes of goods than other modes of transportation, public agencies know little about their travel patterns and how the roadway network performs for trucks. Trucking companies use data from the Global Positioning System (GPS) provided by commercial vendors to dispatch and track their equipment.
Paper
Published: 2011
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Kelly Pitera, Felipe Sandoval
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
A case study of the University of Washington Mailing Services, which operates a heterogeneous fleet of vehicles, provides insight into the impact of operational changes on cost, service quality, and emissions. An emissions minimization problem was formulated and solutions were identified with a creation and local search algorithm based on the I1 and 2-opts heuristics.
Technical Report
Published: 2010
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Xiaolei Ma, Charles Klocow, Anthony Curreri, Duane Wright
Journal/Book: TransNow, Transportation Northwest, U.S. Department of Transportation, University Transportation Centers Program.
Summary:
Although trucks move the largest volume and value of goods in urban areas, relatively little is known about their travel patterns and how the roadway network performs for trucks.