UNIVERSITY TRANSPORTATION CENTERS (UTC) CONFERENCE FOR THE SOUTHEASTERN REGION

University Transportation Centers (UTC) Conference for the Southeastern Region was the first event of its kind, aiming to bring together faculty, students, practitioners, and public agencies in the Southeast, disseminate information about ongoing activities at all partner universities, and further enhance collaboration among the academic community as well as the private and public sector agencies in the region.  Faculty, staff and graduate students, as well as federal and state agency representatives, MPOs, transit managers, and consultants in the region and around the country were invited to attend and participate in this conference which we hope will evolve into an annual event. 

Presentations:

Dr. Yang Wang – Next-Generation Wireless Bridge Weigh-in-Motion (WIM) System Incorporated with Nondestructive Evaluation (NDE) Capability for Transportation Infrastructure Safety

Dr. Amr Oloufa – Automated Capture of Freight Origin/Destination Data using License Plate Readers

Dr. Nasim Uddin – Impact of Doubling Heavy Vehicles on Bridges

Stephanie Amoaning-Yankson – Disasters and Linear Infrastructure Management

Xia Jin, Albert Gan, and Md Sakoat Hossan – Traffic Management Centers: Challenges, Best Practices, and Future Plan

Vivek Ghosal and Frank Southworth – Location of Automobile Manufacturing Plants, Development of Supply-Chains, and the Effects on Economic Development and Demand for Transportation

Catherine L. Ross, David Jung-Hwi Lee, Subhrajit Guhathakurta, and Sarah M. Smith – Georgia SPLOST Database and Clearinghouse for Transportation Finance

Virginia Sisiopiku, Albert Gan, Andrew Sullivan, and Despina Stavrinos – Impacts of Digital Advertising Billboards on Traffic Safety

Berrin Tansel, Xia Jin, and Adjo Amekudzi – Reducing Service Interruption in Linear Infrastructure Systems by Synchronizing Schedules for Selected Maintenance Activities

Arindam Gan Chowdhury – Full-Scale Wall of Wind Testing of Variable Message Signs (VMS) Structures to Develop Drag Coefficient for AASHTO Supports Specifications

Md Sakoat Hossan – Developing Traffic Incident Management (TIM) Framework

Kia Mostaan – Opportunities and Challenges for Expediting Delivery of Transportation Design Build Projects

Mohammad Ilbeigi – Development of Risk Management Strategies for State DOTs to Effectively Deal with Volatile Prices of Transportation Construction Materials

Candace Brakewood – An Experiment Evaluating the Impacts of Real-Time Transit Information on Bus Riders in Tampa, Florida

Hyung Woong Cho – Comparative Analysis of Dynamic Pricing Strategies for Managed Lanes

Kathryn Colberg – Real-Time Work Zone Travel Time

Aaron Greenwood – Effect of Roadside Environment on Diverge Identification in Work Zones

Daniel Hester and Aref Motamedi Lamouki – Digital Advertising Billboards and Driver Distraction

Amy Ingles and Stephanie Brodie – Sustainability Evaluation of Transportation Systems and Neighborhood-Level Developments

Prabha (Popa) Pratyaksa – Safety Performance Evaluation of Converging Chevron Pavement Markings

Landon Reed – Transit Data Standards: Informing Federal Policy and ITS Requirements

Laura Schmitt – Calibration of the HCM 2010 Single-lane Roundabout Capacity Equations for Georgia Conditions

James Wong – Are TMC’s Ready to Buy Traffic Data? A Survey of TMC Managers on Third-Party GPS Data

The conference was organized jointly by the four UTCs located in Federal Region 4 (southeast): The Southeastern Transportation, Research Innovation, Development and Education Center (STRIDE), the National Center for Intermodal Transportation for Economic Competitiveness (NCITEC), the National Center for Transportation Systems Productivity and Management (NCTSPM), and the National Center for Transit Research (NCTR). The following universities are consortium members in one or more of those four centers:  Auburn University, Florida International University, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia Transportation Institute, Hampton University, Louisiana State University, Mississippi State University, North Carolina State University, North Dakota State University, University of Alabama at Birmingham, University of Central Florida, University of Denver, University of Florida, University of Illinois, University of Mississippi, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and University of South Florida.

Date and time: 

Monday, April 15, 2013 – 09:30

Event Type: 

Symposia & Conferences

TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH BOARD TAPS UTIL STUDENT FOR HONORABLE MENTION

Two UTIL graduate students, Alex Poznanski and Candace Brakewood, were part of the Georgia Tech team named “Honorable Mention” in the Transportation Research Board (TRB) Data Competition. The competition included nearly 30 teams from universities and companies competing on two different transportation-related problems.  To read more about the team and the competition, please follow this link.

DR. ALEXANDRE BAYEN TO SPEAK ABOUT SMART PHONES, NASH-STACKELBERG GAMES, AND TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT

The Georgia Tech National Center for Transportation Productivity and Management is proud to present a talk by noted transportation expert, Dr. Alexandre Bayen, on Tuesday, February 19 at 11:00 a.m. in room 109 of the Instructional Center.

The talk is free and open to students, faculty, staff, and the public.

Bayen is the principle investigator behind Mobile Millenium, a research project sponsored by the University of California at Berkeley  that launched a pilot traffic-monitoring system using the GPS in cellular phones to gather traffic information, process it, and distribute it back to the phones in real time.

In his talk, Bayen will explore the problem of real-time estimation and control of distributed parameters systems in the context of monitoring traffic with smartphones. He will present theoretical results, algorithms and implementations designed to integrate mobile measurements obtained from smartphones into distributed parameter models of traffic.

Bayen will also employ a game theoretic framework to explore Stackelberg routing games on parallel networks with horizontal queues, applicable to transportation networks. Assuming that a central authority can incentivize the routes of a subset of the players on a network, and that the remaining players choose their routes selfishly, can one compute an optimal route assignment that minimizes the total cost?

The results will be illustrated using Mobile Millennium, which is operational in Northern California and streams more than 60 million data points a day into traffic models. The talk will also present a new program recently launched in California, called the Connected Corridor program, which will prototype and pilot California’s next generation traffic management infrastructure.

TRANSPORTATIONCAMP SOUTH

TransportationCamp South is coming to Atlanta on Saturday, February 9, 2013!
The sixth TransportationCamp to date and the first to be held in the Southern U.S., TranspoCamp South will bring together thinkers and doers in the fields of transportation and technology for a day of learning, debating, connecting, and creating.

Registration
Registration is now open! To register, please visit http://transpocampsouth.eventbrite.com/

Venue
TranportationCamp South will be held at the new Clough Commons, a state-of-the-art learning facility in the heart of the Georgia Tech campus in Midtown Atlanta.

Schedule
The event will run from 9:30am to 5:00pm on Saturday, February 9, 2013. Lunch and a light breakfast will be provided. Stay tuned for a more detailed schedule.

Sponsors
Support for TransportationCamp South is being provided by the Georgia Tech Urban Transportation Information Lab, The Sierra Club – Georgia Chapter, Imagine Atlanta, and Citizens for Progressive Transit.

For more information, visit http://transpocampsouth.eventbrite.com/