48 results on '"TRANSPORT DATA"'
Search Results
2. On the Automated Text Report Generation in Open Transport Data Analysis Platform
- Author
-
Bulygin, Mark, Namiot, Dmitry, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Vishnevskiy, Vladimir M., editor, Samouylov, Konstantin E., editor, and Kozyrev, Dmitry V., editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The effect of economic incentives and cooperation messages on user participation in crowdsourced public transport technologies.
- Author
-
Arriagada, Jacqueline, Mena, Claudio, Munizaga, Marcela, and Schwartz, Daniel
- Subjects
MONETARY incentives ,INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,PUBLIC transit ,FIELD research ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Transport data is crucial for transport planning and operations. Collecting high-quality data has long been challenging due to the difficulty of achieving adequate spatiotemporal coverage within a representative sample. The increasingly integrated use of Information and Communication technologies in transport systems offers an opportunity to collect data using non-traditional methods. Crowdsourcing applications are an example where a community of users shares information about their travel experience. However, crowdsourcing applications depend on a critical mass of users providing feedback. We conducted a large-scale field experiment to examine the effect of economic incentives (a lottery for free trips) and cooperation messages (asking users to help the community) to encourage users to share reports about bus stop conditions using a crowdsourcing app. We found that offering an economic incentive increased the participation rate almost three times compared to a control group, which did not receive any message. This positive effect lasted for several weeks but decreased over time, especially for users who had not made reports prior to the experiment. This incentive also increased the number of reports shared by users. Using a cooperation message, with or without the economic incentive, also increased the participation rate compared to the control group, but adding a cooperation message decreased the effect of a standalone economic incentive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Turning Transport Data to Comply with EU Standards While Enabling a Multimodal Transport Knowledge Graph
- Author
-
Scrocca, Mario, Comerio, Marco, Carenini, Alessio, Celino, Irene, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Pan, Jeff Z., editor, Tamma, Valentina, editor, d’Amato, Claudia, editor, Janowicz, Krzysztof, editor, Fu, Bo, editor, Polleres, Axel, editor, Seneviratne, Oshani, editor, and Kagal, Lalana, editor
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Intermolecular potential parameters for transport property modeling of energetic organic molecules.
- Author
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Patidar, Lalit, Khichar, Mayank, and Thynell, Stefan T.
- Subjects
- *
INTERMOLECULAR interactions , *CHEMICAL potential , *MOLECULAR shapes , *DIFFUSION coefficients , *POTENTIAL energy surfaces , *QUANTUM chemistry - Abstract
Abstract Transport properties such as coefficients of diffusion, viscosities and thermal conductivities of chemical species are required for combustion modeling of energetic materials. These can be obtained from intermolecular potential energy surfaces. Hence, we present a theoretical study of intermolecular potential energy surfaces for the interactions of various energetic organic molecules with four bath gases – He, Ne, Ar and N 2. High-level ab initio calculations, i.e., counterpoise corrected QCISD(T) with complete basis set (CBS) extrapolations based on aug-cc-pVDZ and aug-cc-pVTZ basis sets, are used to evaluate the accuracy of various computationally feasible yet accurate low-level quantum chemistry methods. Intermolecular potential energy surfaces are then calculated for a training set of six molecules including two nitramines (CH 2 NNO 2 and CH 3 NHNO 2), two nitrate esters (CH 3 ONO 2 and CH 3 CH 2 ONO 2) and two nitroalkanes (CH 3 NO 2 and CH 3 CH 2 NO 2). The ab initio data are used to parametrize an analytical pairwise intermolecular potential. The potential is then used to calculate Lennard-Jones parameters for the training set, as well as a separate test set containing nine energetic organic molecules. Lennard-Jones collision rates for molecules in test set, calculated using analytical pairwise potential, are within ∼20% of those obtained via the ab initio calculations. A novel strategy is proposed to calculate pure-gas Lennard-Jones parameters from various combining rules and four bath gases. Gas-phase transport properties of nitromethane – viscosity, thermal conductivity and diffusion coefficient – calculated using pure-gas Lennard-Jones parameters obtained from the proposed method, are in good agreement with the experimental results at various temperatures. The validated analytical potentials and the strategy to calculate pure-gas Lennard-Jones parameters are then applied to develop a transport properties database for nitramines, which is subsequently used in combustion modeling of RDX. Comparative sensitivity analysis indicates that the sensitivity of burn-rate to transport parameters is as significant as the sensitivity to reaction rate parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Urban Mobility Demand Profiles: Time Series for Cars and Bike-Sharing Use as a Resource for Transport and Energy Modeling
- Author
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Michel Noussan, Giovanni Carioni, Francesco Davide Sanvito, and Emanuela Colombo
- Subjects
urban mobility ,demand profiles ,transport data ,cars ,bike sharing. ,Bibliography. Library science. Information resources - Abstract
The transport sector is currently facing a significant transition, with strong drivers includingdecarbonization and digitalization trends, especially in urban passenger transport. The availability ofmonitoring data is at the basis of the development of optimization models supporting an enhancedurban mobility, with multiple benefits including lower pollutants and CO2 emissions, lower energyconsumption, better transport management and land space use. This paper presents two datasetsthat represent time series with a high temporal resolution (five-minute time step) both for vehiclesand bike sharing use in the city of Turin, located in Northern Italy. These high-resolution profileshave been obtained by the collection and elaboration of available online resources providing liveinformation on traffic monitoring and bike sharing docking stations. The data are provided for theentire year 2018, and they represent an interesting basis for the evaluation of seasonal and dailyvariability patterns in urban mobility. These data may be used for different applications, rangingfrom the chronological distribution of mobility demand, to the estimation of passenger transportflows for the development of transport models in urban contexts. Moreover, traffic profiles are at thebasis for the modeling of electric vehicles charging strategies and their interaction with the powergrid.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Ion Motion in Dielectric Gases
- Author
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de Urquijo, Jaime, Christophorou, Loucas G., editor, and Olthoff, James K., editor
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Semantic Conversion of Transport Data Adopting Declarative Mappings: an Evaluation of Performance and Scalability
- Author
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Scrocca, Mario, Carenini, Alessio, Comerio, Marco, and Celino, Irene
- Subjects
Semantic Data Conversion ,Transport Data ,Knowledge Graph Construction - Abstract
The transportation domain is characterised by a multitude of different formats to represent data, thus creating a problem of (lack of) interoperability between systems and a need for data conversion. In or- der to cope with the specific requirements of production systems, special attention should be given to performance and scalability of conversion solutions. In this paper, we present a thorough evaluation of the Chimera framework for semantic data conversion through declarative mappings, in both a dataset and message conversion scenarios. We illustrate the experimental results and we offer our considerations and recommenda- tions for the successful implementation of conversion pipelines exploiting Semantic Web technologies.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. OPTIMIZATION ALGORITHM.
- Author
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Nan, Marin Silviu, Constantin, Bogdan, and Ioan, Cucu
- Subjects
MINE surveying ,GRAPH theory ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
In this paper we present computer and mathematical model for solving the optimal conditions in mining using examples using graph theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
10. DATA TRANSMISSION IN THE INTERNET AND TAKING OVER THEIR PC, TABLET OR SMARTPHONE A WIND GENERATOR.
- Author
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Constantin, Bogdan, Nan, Marin Silviu, and Nicoleta Loredana, Raicea Mamara
- Subjects
DATA transmission systems ,ANEMOMETER ,MICROCONTROLLERS - Abstract
Harnessing this potential energy has a fundamental component, data collection about aerogenerator, for processing and optimization of production process of energy. In the system proposed by me, the costs are low and the benefits are manifold. The project can be expanded and improved, and can generate statistics on monthly or annual average wind speed in the area using an anemometer and an analogue input of the microcontroller. Data taken fot be saved and archived for a thorough study of the potential of wind in the area. Electricity charged can be totaled on different time intervals, such as weeks, months, or years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
11. On-Board Data Management Layer: Connected Vehicle as Data Platform
- Author
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Salim Bitam, Abdelhamid Mellouk, and Khireddine Benaissa
- Subjects
TK7800-8360 ,Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,Data management ,Distributed computing ,02 engineering and technology ,Traffic flow (computer networking) ,Resource (project management) ,0502 economics and business ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Layer (object-oriented design) ,Architecture ,connected vehicle ,Intelligent transportation system ,050210 logistics & transportation ,Artificial neural network ,business.industry ,on-board computing ,05 social sciences ,intelligent transportation systems ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,transport data ,Hardware and Architecture ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Analytics ,Signal Processing ,intelligent vehicle ,data management ,Electronics ,business ,artificial neural network - Abstract
For connected vehicles, as well as generally for the transportation sector, data are now seen as a precious resource. They can be used to make right decisions, improve road safety, reduce CO2 emissions, or optimize processes. However, analyzing these data is not so much a question of which technologies to use, but rather about where these data are analyzed. Thereby, the emerging vehicle architecture has to become a data-oriented architecture based on embedded computing platforms and take into account new applications, artificial intelligence elements, advanced analytics, and operating systems. Accordingly, in this paper, we introduce the concept of data management to the vehicle by proposing an on-board data management layer, so that the vehicle can play the role of data platform capable of storing, processing, and diffusing data. Our proposed layer supports analytics and data science to deliver additional value from the connected vehicle data and stimulate the development of new services. In addition, our data platform can also form or contribute to shaping the backbone of data-driven transport. An on-board platform was built where the dataset size was reduced 80% and a rate of 99% accuracy was achieved in a 5 min traffic flow prediction using artificial neural networks (ANNs).
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Stimulating or frustrating research ? Transport geography and (un)available data
- Author
-
Frédéric Dobruszkes
- Subjects
transport geography ,mobilities ,transport data ,data availability ,qualitative–quantitative divide ,new mobilities paradigm ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
This paper addresses the concern of data in line with transport geography. Focusing mainly on data availability, it highlights how data on both transport and spaces are important to transport geography. More and more data are becoming available on infrastructures and scheduled services, although often expensive, and on spaces. In contrast, non-scheduled services, freight transport and the demand remain or are becoming largely unknown. This opens and closes doors to transport geographers, paradoxically at the time when post-modernist postures tend to despise figures.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Digital Data for Transport in Dar es Salaam : Overview, Challenges, and Opportunities
- Author
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World Bank
- Subjects
DIGITAL ECONOMY ,INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY ,PUBLIC TRANSIT ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,TRANSPORT PLANNING ,ROAD SAFETY ,TRANSPORT DATA ,DIGITAL DATA ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT - Abstract
Like Dar es Salaam, many large cities face major transport challenges due to the continuous growth of the urban population, private vehicle ownership, congestion, and the fragility of public transportation systems. Transport can become a constraint on both economic growth and social development and inclusion, along with increased negative impacts on health and on the environment. Because of the increasing use of modern technology, transportation has become a data-rich industry. By bringing the data together, and by using open formats, the data can be used for innovative applications to help relieve urban traffic congestion, to improve the provision and operation of public transport services, and to reduce environmental damage with the goal of improving the lives of citizens. The use of data enables transport planners, operators, and users to obtain additional economic, social, and environmental benefits from the physical transport investment and infrastructure. This report shows that Dar es Salaam is on the cusp of a transport data revolution. Generally, the conclusions are that there are no major blocks to progress, but in many areas, there is a lot of work that will need to be done over time.
- Published
- 2020
14. The transport sector in transition – : different pathways of handling transport data in urban regions of Helsinki, London, Oslo and Singapore
- Author
-
Kriukelyte, Erika and Kriukelyte, Erika
- Abstract
The fourth industrial revolution is disrupting almost every industry in every country and the transport sector is not an exception in this discussion, with increasing mobility demands and evolving mobility needs in consideration of global sustainability goals. In light of these technological changes and discussions, public authorities are on the path of transition and the role of public transport authorities is still unclear for themselves, for business or even for society at large. This issue extends to transport data policies as there is still a lack a general overview concerning what pathways different cities are working on and implementing. Therefore, this study, as a part of Swedish research programme Mistra SAMS, aims to provide an overview of policies and the management of data connected with the transport sector in four selected city regions: Helsinki, London, Oslo and Singapore. Three research questions have been examined: 1. How do different transport authorities in urban regions approach transport data and perceive the value of data? 2. What kind of action plan is being implemented to create the public value of transport data within the public authorities? 3. How is all of this reflected in collaboration with third parties? Institutional theory is used in the multi-case analysis to guide the collection of data through document analysis and semi-structured interviews and provides a framework for analysis and structuring of the findings. The findings showcased different approaches to data and overall themes in the institutional context in different regions, which included themes such as policies, administrative reforms, technology, interoperability, partnerships and transport data repository. The final discussion identifies two main development paths: technology-led development and other mobility concept-led development. All regions work actively with transport data management, although each builds their approach on different ideas and practices. The proact, QC 20190710
- Published
- 2019
15. Chemical compatibility of PU/PAN interpenetrating polymer network membrane with substituted aromatic solvents
- Author
-
Kumar, H. and Siddaramaiah
- Subjects
- *
ABSORPTION , *AROMATIC compounds , *DIFFUSION , *POLYMERS , *ORGANIC solvents , *SOLUBILITY , *POLYETHYLENE glycol , *BOUNDARY value problems , *ENTHALPY , *ENTROPY , *EQUILIBRIUM , *THERMODYNAMICS - Abstract
Polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based polyurethane/polyacrylonitrile (PU/PAN, 50/50) semi-interpenetrating polymer network (SIPN) membrane has been studied from sorption/desorption cycles and diffusion behaviour with substituted aromatic probe molecules at 20, 40 and 60°C. Sorption/desorption cycles have been repeated to evaluate polymer–solvent interaction. Organic solvents taken up or given out by IPN are measured periodically till equilibrium. Using these data, sorption (S), diffusion (D) and permeation (P) coefficients have been calculated from Fick''s equation. Sorption data is correlated with solubility parameter of solvents and polymer. It was found that solvents of comparable solubility parameter with IPN interact more and thus there is an increase in sorption. Molecular mass between cross-link has been calculated using Flory Rehner equation. The cross-link density and degree of cross-linking of the membrane is calculated. From the temperature dependence of sorption and diffusion coefficients, the Arrhenius activation parameters like activation energy for diffusion (E D ) and permeation (E P ) processes have been calculated. Furthermore, the sorption results have been interpreted in terms of thermodynamic parameters such as change in enthalpy (ΔH) and entropy (ΔS). Concentration profiles of penetrants at different penetration depths in the polymer sample at different time intervals have also been calculated theoretically from a solution of Fick''s equation under appropriate initial boundary conditions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Transport behavior of n-alkane penetrants into castor oil based polyurethane–polyester nonwoven fabric composites
- Author
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Satheesh Kumar, M.N., Manjula, K.S., and Siddaramaiah
- Subjects
- *
TEXTILE research , *POLYESTERS , *CASTOR oil , *POLYURETHANES , *ISOCYANATES , *TOLUENE diisocyanate , *HEXAMETHYLENE diisocyanate , *ALKANES , *ABSORPTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL aspects - Abstract
Castor oil based polyurethane (PU)–polyester nonwoven fabric composites were fabricated by impregnating the polyester nonwoven fabric in a composition containing castor oil and diisocyanate. Composites were fabricated with two different isocyanates such as toluene-2,4-diisocyanate (TDI) and hexamethylene diisocyanate (HMDI). Transport behavior of n-alkane penetrants (pentane, hexane and heptane) into both PUs and PU–polyester nonwoven fabric composites were studied. Sorption studies were carried out at different temperatures. From the sorption results, the diffusion (D) and permeation (P) coefficients of penetrants have been calculated. Significant increase in the diffusion and permeation coefficients was observed with increase in the temperature of sorption experiments. Drastical reduction in diffusion and permeation coefficients was noticed in the composites compared to neat PUs. Attempts were made to estimate the empirical parameters like n, which suggests the mode of transport and K is a constant depends on the structural characteristics of the composite in addition to its interaction with penetrants. The temperature dependence of the transport coefficients has been used to estimate the activation energy parameter for diffusion (E D) and permeation (E P) processes from Arrhenius plots. Furthermore, the sorption results have been interpreted in terms of the thermodynamic parameters such as enthalpy (ΔH) and entropy (ΔS). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Are measures of air-misses a useful guide to air transport safety policy?
- Author
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Button, Kenneth and Drexler, Jonathan
- Subjects
AIRCRAFT accidents ,SAFETY ,TRANSPORTATION safety measures ,ACCIDENTS - Abstract
Abstract: Finding a proxy for analyzing and developing policy responses to rare events is often challenging. In the case of commercial airline accidents, these are small in number, especially within most national jurisdiction. This makes it difficult to use standard, objective probability techniques for assessing the impacts of various safety policies or for developing monetary measures for their inclusion in cost-benefit analysis studies. What is often used in place of the actual or predicted accident rate is a measure of ‘air’ (or ‘near’) misses that reflects the number of times a technically determined safety parameter is violated. The paper looks at whether this is a useful measure in terms of the quality of the data available, and whether it acts as a reasonable proxy when used in air transportation safety analysis and policy-making. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Sorption and diffusion of chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbon penetrants into diol chain extended polyurethane membranes
- Author
-
Kendaganna Swamy, B.K. and Siddaramaiah
- Subjects
- *
ALKANES , *ABSORPTION , *DIFFUSION - Abstract
Sorption and diffusion of a number of chlorinated alkanes through a diol chain extended polyurethane (PU) membranes have been investigated at 25, 40 and 60 °C, based on an immersion weight gain method. From the sorption result, the diffusion (D) and permeation (P) coefficients of halogenated hydrocarbon penetrants have been calculated. Molecular transport data depends on membrane–solvent interactions, size of the penetrants, temperature and also morphology of the chain extended PUs. The temperature dependence of the transport coefficient has been used to estimate the activation parameters for the process of diffusion (ED) and permeation (EP) from the Arrhenius plots. Furthermore, the sorption results have been interpreted interms of the thermodynamic parameters such as enthalpy and entropy. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Urban Mobility Demand Profiles: Time Series for Cars and Bike-Sharing Use as a Resource for Transport and Energy Modeling
- Author
-
Noussan, Carioni, Sanvito, and Colombo
- Subjects
transport data ,demand profiles ,urban mobility ,bike sharing ,cars - Abstract
The transport sector is currently facing a significant transition, with strong drivers includingdecarbonization and digitalization trends, especially in urban passenger transport. The availability ofmonitoring data is at the basis of the development of optimization models supporting an enhancedurban mobility, with multiple benefits including lower pollutants and CO2 emissions, lower energyconsumption, better transport management and land space use. This paper presents two datasetsthat represent time series with a high temporal resolution (five-minute time step) both for vehiclesand bike sharing use in the city of Turin, located in Northern Italy. These high-resolution profileshave been obtained by the collection and elaboration of available online resources providing liveinformation on traffic monitoring and bike sharing docking stations. The data are provided for theentire year 2018, and they represent an interesting basis for the evaluation of seasonal and dailyvariability patterns in urban mobility. These data may be used for different applications, rangingfrom the chronological distribution of mobility demand, to the estimation of passenger transportflows for the development of transport models in urban contexts. Moreover, traffic profiles are at thebasis for the modeling of electric vehicles charging strategies and their interaction with the powergrid.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. On-Board Data Management Layer: Connected Vehicle as Data Platform.
- Author
-
Benaissa, Khireddine, Bitam, Salim, and Mellouk, Abdelhamid
- Subjects
DATA management ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,COMPUTING platforms ,INTELLIGENT transportation systems - Abstract
For connected vehicles, as well as generally for the transportation sector, data are now seen as a precious resource. They can be used to make right decisions, improve road safety, reduce CO
2 emissions, or optimize processes. However, analyzing these data is not so much a question of which technologies to use, but rather about where these data are analyzed. Thereby, the emerging vehicle architecture has to become a data-oriented architecture based on embedded computing platforms and take into account new applications, artificial intelligence elements, advanced analytics, and operating systems. Accordingly, in this paper, we introduce the concept of data management to the vehicle by proposing an on-board data management layer, so that the vehicle can play the role of data platform capable of storing, processing, and diffusing data. Our proposed layer supports analytics and data science to deliver additional value from the connected vehicle data and stimulate the development of new services. In addition, our data platform can also form or contribute to shaping the backbone of data-driven transport. An on-board platform was built where the dataset size was reduced 80% and a rate of 99% accuracy was achieved in a 5 min traffic flow prediction using artificial neural networks (ANNs). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Transport Data Readiness Assessment : The Kyrgyz Republic
- Author
-
Vlasov, Vitaly
- Subjects
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY ,PRIVACY ,DATA REUSE ,ACCESS TO INFORMATION ,ROAD SAFETY ,TRANSPORT DATA - Abstract
The globalization of the economy is influencing not only internal and external migration and demographic processes but also urbanization in almost all countries. Big cities are growing fast, increasing the critical role of the transportation. Today, digital technologies and data analytics techniques provide tremendous opportunities to urban planners, central and municipal governments, and residents and the business sector to share and reuse data from various sources to jointly solve problems associated with transportation. The latest global trends in urban planning and management demonstrate significant increase of technology deployment, expansion of Big Data, Open Government Data (OGD), cloud computing, wide spread of mobile devices, and the internet of things. This report presents key findings of the Transport Data Readiness Assessment conducted in the Kyrgyz Republic, with special focus on urban transportation in Bishkek, the capital city. Based on the analysis of the situation, the report identifies obstacles and challenges and provides a set of recommendations to be considered by the central government and the Bishkek city administration, including relevant smart digitally enabled solutions.
- Published
- 2018
22. Towards a ground truth of AADT on using video data and tracking software?
- Author
-
Øhlenschlæger, Rasmus, Lahrmann, Harry Spaabæk, Moeslund, Thomas B., Bahnsen, Chris Holmberg, and Agerholm, Niels
- Subjects
Videodetektering ,Traffic data ,Trafikdata ,Datakvalitet ,Data quality ,Transport data ,Video detetion - Abstract
There is an increase in traffic volumes and, as such, a requirement for maximisation of the road capacity. It is crucial that there is awareness of the traffic volumes in order to make the right choices regarding road development. Video registrations and related software to video analysis to measure traffic volumes are increasingly used, but there is limited documentation on the reliability of these. This paper compares manual registrations, treated as ground truth, the hardware independent software RUBA and an on-the-shelf product. While the RUBA software, in general, had a reasonable precision on the direction parallel to the camera direction (8% and 3% deviations, respectively); it was less precise regarding transversal-driving vehicles (23% deviation). The on-the-shelf hardware had a significantly higher deviation regarding the two parallel directions, (35% and 67% deviations, respectively) and a reasonable deviation regarding transversal-driving vehicles (11% deviation). It indicates that on-the-shelf hardware might need further calibration in general. There is an increase in traffic volumes and, as such, a requirement for maximisation of the road capacity. It is crucial that there is awareness of the traffic volumes in order to make the right choices regarding road development. Video registrations and related software to video analysis to measure traffic volumes are increasingly used, but there is limited documentation on the reliability of these. This paper compares manual registrations, treated as ground truth, the hardware independent software RUBA and an on-the-shelf product. While the RUBA software, in general, had a reasonable precision on the direction parallel to the camera direction (8% and 3% deviations, respectively); it was less precise regarding transversal-driving vehicles (23% deviation). The on-the-shelf hardware had a significantly higher deviation regarding the two parallel directions, (35% and 67% deviations, respectively) and a reasonable deviation regarding transversal-driving vehicles (11% deviation). It indicates that on-the-shelf hardware might need further calibration in general.
- Published
- 2018
23. Long-distance travel in Germany - Modular analysis and methodological comparison of available data
- Author
-
Nobis, Claudia and Schulz, Angelika
- Subjects
transport data ,survey design ,comparative analysis ,Personenverkehr ,long-distance travel ,tourism data ,data merging ,Institut für Verkehrsforschung - Published
- 2017
24. World Bank Support for Open Data 2012-2017
- Author
-
World Bank Group
- Subjects
ENERGY DATA ,OPEN GOVERNMENT ,READINESS ASSESSMENT ,GOVERNANCE ,COMMUNICATION ,TRANSPORT DATA ,NATIONAL STATISTICAL OFFICES ,POLICY ,OPEN DATA ,INFORMATION AND TECHNOLOGY ,BUSINESS DATA ,DATA LITERACY - Abstract
This report summarizes the World Bank’s activities to support the Open Data efforts of developing countries during the period 2012 - 2017. It is largely descriptive, but Chapter 4 includes key analysis and lessons learned. The main objectives of this report are to share information within the World Bank and with its partners and client countries, and to preserve the institutional memory and highlight the lessons learned as a way to improve the development effectiveness of Open Data.
- Published
- 2017
25. Localization Effects in Amorphous Semiconductors
- Author
-
Dersch, U., Thomas, P., Adler, David, editor, Schwartz, Brian B., editor, Kastner, Marc A., editor, Thomas, Gordon A., editor, and Ovshinsky, Stanford R., editor
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Transport properties of some conducting TCNQ-salts
- Author
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Mortensen, Kell, Jacobsen, C. S., Andersen, J. R., Bechgaard, K., Ehlers, J., editor, Hepp, K., editor, Kippenhahn, R., editor, Weidenmüller, H. A., editor, Zittartz, J., editor, Beiglböck, W., editor, Bariŝić, Slaven, editor, Bjeliŝ, Aleksa, editor, Cooper, John Robert, editor, and Leontić, Boran A., editor
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of Near-Threshold e-H2 Collisions
- Author
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Crompton, Robert W., Morrison, Michael A., Pitchford, Leanne C., editor, McKoy, B. Vincent, editor, Chutjian, Ara, editor, and Trajrnar, Sandor, editor
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Interpretation of Transport Data
- Author
-
Kotyk, Arnošt, Janáček, Karel, Kotyk, Arnošt, and Janáček, Karel
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Approaches to Create a Data Basis for Modelling of Long-Distance Travel Behaviour
- Author
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Pfefferkorn, Ursula
- Subjects
travel demand ,transport data ,data fusion ,comparative analysis ,Personenverkehr ,long-distance travel ,tourism data ,Institut für Verkehrsforschung - Abstract
Long-distance travel, respectively interurban travel, makes up a considerable share in transport performance: nearly half of the passenger transport performance is accounted by trips of more than 100 km. Furthermore passenger long-distance travel is achieving considerable growth while other segments of transport rather remain static. Above that passenger long-distance travel is in the focus of politics and research against the background of energy and climate objectives and due to a dynamic supply development. Despite the relevance of this transport segment, an appropriate depiction of long-distance travel behavior within the framework of a multimodal model is missing in Germany and most other countries. One fundamental reason for that is the heterogeneous data situation, resulting from the fact that the topic is of interest by different institutions that generate relevant data. By means of different survey methods the data on long-distance travel behavior is collected, but mostly with deviant focuses or different objectives. The question arises, whether it is possible to generate a consistent and exclusive data set from the different data sources, which can build the basis for long-distance travel model. The aim is, to apply and enhance statistic and econometric methods, to build a model respectively an instrument for data fusion of long-distance travel data. An essential basic work hereby is to clearly differentiate and define the segment of long-distance travel. In the next step the today available data sources are listed and contrasted with each other. Finally I provide a methodological framework on how the available data can enhance the current data basis for long-distance travel behavior. The work intends to contribute to presently existing fundamental challenges in modelling long-distance passenger travel through combining available data in a creative and innovative manner.
- Published
- 2016
30. Interpretation of Transport Data
- Author
-
Kotyk, Arnošt, Janáček, Karel, Kotyk, Arnošt, and Janáček, Karel
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Estimating the Size of External Effects of Energy Subsidies in Transport and Agriculture
- Author
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Commander, Simon, Nikoloski, Zlatko, and Vagliasindi, Maria
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,INFRASTRUCTURE ,FUEL SUBSIDIES ,CONGESTION ,LORRIES ,RAILWAYS ,TRIPS ,ROAD ,POLLUTION COSTS ,SPEEDS ,EXTERNALITIES ,CARS ,ELASTICITIES ,MODAL CHOICE ,TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,CONGESTION COST ,COST OF TRANSPORT ,EMISSIONS ,INVESTMENTS ,TRANSPORT ECONOMICS ,ELASTICITIES OF ROAD TRAFFIC ,VEHICLE EMISSIONS ,MOTOR VEHICLE OWNERSHIP ,RAILWAY ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,FUEL-EFFICIENT VEHICLES ,FOSSIL FUELS ,TOLL ,TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS ,TYPE OF TRANSPORT ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,SUBSIDIES ,LAND USE ACCESSIBILITY ,FUEL PRICE INCREASES ,LONG-DISTANCE TRAVEL ,INJURY ,FUEL TAX ,PRICE SENSITIVITIES ,EMISSION FACTORS ,ROAD DEATHS ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,TRUCK USE ,RAIL ,FUEL OIL ,ELASTICITY ,MOTOR VEHICLES ,URBAN MOBILITY ,CAR OCCUPANCY ,VEHICLE FUEL ECONOMY ,MARGINAL EXTERNAL COSTS ,VEHICLE AIR POLLUTION ,VEHICLE USE ,COST OF CONGESTION ,PRICE CHANGES ,PRICE ELASTICITIES ,AUTOMOBILE ,COSTS ,VEHICLE OWNERSHIP ,CONGESTION CHARGING ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,PRICE ELASTICITY ,COSTS OF TRANSPORT ,FUEL ECONOMY ,MODES OF TRANSPORT ,ACCIDENTS ,NOISE ,TAX SUBSIDIES ,VEHICLE COST ,SIGNALS ,TRAVEL COSTS ,TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,AIR ,TRANSPORT SERVICE ,ELASTICITIES OF VEHICLE TRAVEL ,POLICIES ,TRADING PATTERNS ,MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT ,AIR POLLUTION ,JOURNEY ,SAFETY ,VEHICLE TRAVEL ELASTICITY ,CRASHES ,ROAD ACCIDENTS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FUEL COST ,TRANSPORT PRICING ,FUELS ,TRAVEL DEMAND ,INLAND TRANSPORT ,MOTOR VEHICLE AIR POLLUTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ,VEHICLE MILES ,FREIGHT ,LONG-RUN ELASTICITIES ,LONG-DISTANCE ,TRUCKS ,VEHICLE FUEL ,TRANSPORT ,HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION ,TRANSPORTATION ,FUEL TAXES ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,GASOLINE CONSUMPTION ,MODAL CHOICES ,GAS CONSUMPTION ,ROAD TRANSPORT ,FREIGHT TRANSPORT ,EXCESS FUEL CONSUMPTION ,FUEL COSTS ,PASSENGERS ,DRAINAGE ,TAX ,GASOLINE TAXES ,TRIP ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT MODES ,LAND USE ,POPULATION GROWTH ,VEHICLE FLEET ,UNDERGROUND ,VEHICLE ,DIESEL ,TRANSPORT DATA ,TRANSPORT MODES ,CAR ,DIESEL FUEL ,TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH ,COST OF TRAVEL ,VEHICLE FUEL EFFICIENCY ,PETROLEUM GAS ,VEHICLE CLASS ,WALKING ,VEHICLE REGISTRATIONS ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,VEHICLE TYPES ,TRANSIT BENEFITS ,FUEL EFFICIENCY ,COSTS OF CONGESTION ,EFFICIENT VEHICLES ,PRICE SENSITIVITY ,POLLUTANT EMISSIONS ,VEHICLE CLASSES ,POLLUTION ,ROAD SAFETY ,ODOMETER ,TRAVEL SURVEY ,BUSES ,AIR POLLUTION DEATHS ,PASSENGERS AS WELL ,HIGH ENERGY ,TRANSPORT POLICIES ,CONGESTION COSTS ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,COSTS OF FUEL ,URBAN TRIPS ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,POPULATION DENSITIES ,MOBILITY ,FUEL PRICE ,PEDESTRIANS ,MOTOR VEHICLE ,FUEL PRICE INCREASE ,TRANSPORT NETWORK ,PRICE CHANGE ,ELASTICITY OF VEHICLE TRAVEL ,VEHICLE KILOMETERS ,TRAFFIC VOLUME ,TRANSIT ,FUEL ,ACCESSIBILITY ,CARBON DIOXIDE ,FUEL PRICES ,ROAD SECTOR ,TRAVEL TIME ,DRIVING ,HIGHWAY ,FUEL PRICE ELASTICITIES ,TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGIES ,URBAN BUSES ,ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ,FATAL INJURIES ,EXHAUST EMISSIONS ,TRAVEL ,FUEL USE ,VEHICLES ,VEHICLE TRAVEL ,PASSENGER TRANSPORT ,TAXES ,PRICE OF FUEL ,LONG RUN ELASTICITY ,TRANSPORT DEMAND ,GASOLINE ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,TRAFFIC ,ROAD INJURIES ,ROAD TRAFFIC ,GASOLINE PRICE ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORT ACTIVITY ,VEHICLE USAGE ,MODE OF TRANSPORT ,SUBSIDY ,GAS EMISSIONS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,CAR OWNERSHIP ,EMISSION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORK ,VEHICLE EFFICIENCY - Abstract
It is widely accepted that the costs of underpricing energy are large, whether in advanced or developing countries. This paper explores how large these costs can be by focussing on the size of the external effects that energy subsidies in particular generate in two important sectors—transport and agriculture—in two countries in the Middle East and North Africa, the Arab Republic of Egypt (transport) and the Republic of Yemen (agriculture). The focus is mainly on the costs associated with congestion and pollution, as well as the impact of underpriced energy for depletion of scarce water resources, including through crop selection. Quantifying the size of external effects in developing countries has received relatively little analytical attention, although there is a significant body of literature for developed countries. By building on earlier research, as well as employing the United Nations ForFITS model, the paper provides indicative estimates of the external costs of energy subsidies, as manifested in congestion and pollution. The estimates using simulations indicate that these costs could be materially reduced by elimination or reduction of energy subsidies. The paper also describes the impact of energy subsidies on water consumption in a region where water resources are particularly limited. The findings provide further evidence of the adverse and significant consequences of subsidizing energy.
- Published
- 2015
32. Philippine Transport Infrastructure Development Roadmap Framework Plan : Executive Summary
- Author
-
Cambridge Systematics
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,AIRPORT ,ROADWAY IMPROVEMENTS ,PASSENGERS ,TRANSPORT RESPONSIBILITIES ,URBAN ROADWAYS ,DRAINAGE ,INFRASTRUCTURE ,NATIONAL TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORT AGENCIES ,AIRPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,CONGESTION ,ROAD ,TRANSPORT PLANNING ,TRIPS ,BOTTLENECKS ,ROUTES ,INITIATIVES ,TRIP ,LAND USE ,POPULATION GROWTH ,AIR FREIGHT ,TRANSPORT DATA COLLECTION ,INVESTMENTS ,VEHICLE ,ROADWAYS ,ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ,TRANSPORTATION NETWORK ,PASSENGER ,TRANSPORT DATA ,CAR ,HIGHWAY SYSTEM ,URBAN ROUTES ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT ,REGIONAL TRANSPORT PLANNING ,VEHICLE SAFETY ,ROAD PLANNING ,TRAFFIC IMPACTS ,ROADWAY DESIGN ,FREIGHT RAIL ,ROAD SAFETY ,REGIONAL TRANSIT ,SPEED ,PASSENGER RAIL ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,URBAN TRANSPORT PLANNING ,RAIL ,ROAD NETWORK ,MODE OF TRAVEL ,MOTOR VEHICLES ,SAFETY ISSUES ,BIKE LANES ,FRAMEWORK ,PASSENGER LEVELS ,AIRPORTS ,PAVEMENT ,MAINTENANCE ,POPULATION DENSITIES ,REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION ,NATIONAL ROADS ,HEAVY TRUCK TRAFFIC ,TRUCK TRAFFIC ,HIGHWAYS ,TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE ,FREIGHT FLOWS ,TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS ,COSTS ,ROAD DESIGN ,TRAVEL TIMES ,LOCAL ROADS ,LANES ,FREIGHT TRAVEL ,TRANSIT ,ROADWAY COSTS ,BASIC ACCESS ,TRAFFIC PLANNERS ,ACCESSIBILITY ,BRIDGE ,ACCIDENTS ,ROADWAY ,TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,TRAFFIC VOLUMES ,ROADS ,SHARING ,TREND ,TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,AIR ,INTERNATIONAL GATEWAYS ,POLICIES ,DESIGN SPEED ,HIGHWAY ,TRANSPORTATION INVESTMENTS ,TRAVELERS ,ROAD CONDITIONS ,LAND-USE PLANNING ,TRAVEL ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,VEHICLES ,RAIL ACCESS ,FATALITIES ,SAFETY ,REGIONAL TRANSPORT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORTATION PLANNING ,TRAINING ,TRAVEL DEMAND ,MARITIME ACCIDENTS ,PORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,TRAFFIC ,FREIGHT MOVEMENT ,ALTERNATIVE MODES ,AIR CARGO ,LAND USE POLICIES ,LOCAL TRANSPORT ,FREIGHT ,LOCAL AUTHORITIES ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,LONG-DISTANCE ,ROAD DEVELOPMENT ,SIDEWALKS ,URBAN CONGESTION ,TRUCKS ,INTEREST ,ROAD CLASSIFICATION ,TRANSPORT STUDIES ,RIGHT-OF- WAY ,TRANSPORT ,ECONOMIES OF SCALE ,TRANSPORTATION ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,PORTS ,TRANSPORT POLICY ,MODAL CHOICES ,ITS ,INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS - Abstract
Various transport-related agencies and local governments develop their respective transport plans or strategies to address bottlenecks and improve outcomes in the transport sector. However, to be able to bring a more focused or targeted intervention that is more inclusive, these various strategies need to focus on establishing interconnectivity between key urban growth centers and between lagging and fast-growing regions, and creating supporting institutions that promote greater integration. Upon the request of the National Economic and Development Authority, a framework plan was developed to provide policy-makers with a strategic framework to help identify the transport needs of the Philippines and guide in implementing an integrated, more coordinated approach to establishing stronger transport infrastructure linkages to support the country’s inclusive growth agenda. The framework plan was developed under the guidance of a vision and goals developed by stakeholders across the Philippines. This comprehensive vision can be summarized as ‘Bringing us all closer together for prosperity.’ The geographic focus of the Framework Plan includes all of the Philippines outside of Metro Manila. This Framework Plan does not replicate the work being done by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) for Metro Manila (the JICA study covers Metro Manila with an approximate radius of 100 kilometers and is being conducted to evaluate specific transport infrastructure projects for the Metro Manila area). Future improvements and needs of transportation infrastructure to meet the demand for long-distance transport to and from Metro Manila and to other urban/economic centers in the Philippines are considered; nevertheless, national-level strategies recommended in this study affect all areas of the Philippines.
- Published
- 2014
33. A Molecular Communication Link for Monitoring in Confined Environments
- Author
-
Weisi Guo, Siyi Wang, Nariman Farsad, Andrew W. Eckford, Song Qiu, Qiu, Song, Guo, Weisi, Wang, Siyi, Farsad, Nariman, Eckford, Andrew, and International Conference on Communications Workshops Australia 2014-06-10
- Subjects
FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Empirical data ,Pulse response ,Molecular communication ,Computer science ,business.industry ,wireless sensor ,TK ,molecular communication ,Computer Science - Emerging Technologies ,structural environment ,Link (geometry) ,empirical data ,Pulse (physics) ,transport data ,molecular diffusion ,Emerging Technologies (cs.ET) ,confined environment ,Electronic engineering ,Wireless ,business ,propagation environment - Abstract
In this paper, we consider a molecular diffusion based communications link that can reliably transport data over-the-air. We show that the system can also reliably transport data across confined structural environments, especially in cases where conventional electromagnetic (EM) wave based systems may fail. In particular, this paper compares the performance of our proprietary molecular communication test-bed with Zigbee wireless sensors in a metal pipe network that does not act as a radio wave-guide. The paper first shows that a molecular-based communication link's performance is determined primarily by the delay time spread of the pulse response. The paper go on to show that molecular-based systems can transmit more reliably in complex and confined structural environments than conventional EM-based systems. The paper then utilizes empirical data to find relationships between the received radio signal strength, the molecular pulse spread, data rate (0.1 bits/s) and the structural propagation environment., IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC)
- Published
- 2014
34. Transport Statistics at the German Aerospace Center - A first step towards interlinked portals
- Author
-
Kelpin, Rene, von Schmidt, Antje, Leipold, Alexandra, and Hepting, Michael
- Subjects
statistics ,Transport data ,search engine ,DLR portals - Published
- 2013
35. Agribusiness Indicators : Mozambique
- Author
-
World Bank
- Subjects
COWPEA ,COMMERCIAL AGRICULTURE ,RURAL DEVELOPMENT ,COMMODITIES ,ROAD ,AGRICULTURAL MECHANIZATION ,AGRICULTURAL LAND ,FERTILIZER USE ,BANANAS ,FARM MACHINERY ,URBANIZATION ,SOYBEANS ,SEED SECTOR ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,COWPEAS ,FARMERS ,TRANSPARENCY ,RAINFED AGRICULTURE ,RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE ,AGRICULTURAL FINANCE ,YIELDS ,FARMER ORGANIZATIONS ,CASH CROPS ,AFDB ,FOOD SUPPLY ,VEGETABLES ,RAIL ,AGRICULTURAL INPUT MARKET ,AGRICULTURAL INPUT ,PRICE INDEX ,POVERTY REDUCTION ,LARGE FARMS ,AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY ,EXPORT ,FOOD PRODUCTION ,MOU ,FAO ,PIGEON PEAS ,CASSAVA ,FIELD WORK ,WORKING CAPITAL ,CROP PRODUCTION ,ANIMAL TRACTION ,POULTRY ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,COMMERCIAL VEHICLES ,AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SYSTEM ,AGRICULTURAL MARKET ,PRODUCTION SYSTEM ,RURAL POPULATION ,CATTLE ,RURAL TRANSPORT ,CONSULTATIVE GROUP ON INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ,FARM IRRIGATION ,ARABLE LAND ,INTERNATIONAL FERTILIZER DEVELOPMENT CENTER ,CGIAR ,ROAD USERS ,PESTICIDES ,FERTILIZER SUBSIDY ,TOBACCO ,AGRICULTURAL LENDING ,AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIST ,SWISS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION ,ROAD CONDITIONS ,SORGHUM ,LABORATORY TESTS ,CROPPING ,FOUNDATION SEED ,AGRICULTURAL INFORMATION ,TREES ,HOUSEHOLDS ,CAPITA AVAILABILITY ,PLANT BREEDING ,AGRICULTURAL GOODS ,INTERNATIONAL MARKET ,WHEAT ,COMMERCIAL FARMERS ,SUGARCANE ,FOOD CROPS ,GROUNDNUT ,INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF TROPICAL AGRICULTURE ,AGRICULTURAL PROCESSING ,APPLICATION OF FERTILIZER ,ECOLOGICAL ZONES ,RICE PRODUCTION ,SEED COMPANY ,UNDP ,FREIGHT ,FERTILIZER ,RICE ,REPLANTING ,SEED PRODUCERS ,COOPERATIVES ,CROPS ,LONG-DISTANCE ,TRUCKS ,AGRICULTURAL ZONES ,GROUNDNUTS ,ROAD MAINTENANCE ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE ,SEED VARIETIES ,TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORTATION ,AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE ,MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING ,SEED TESTING ,INDUSTRIAL CROPS ,MAIZE ,HYBRID MAIZE ,CUTTING ,SWEET POTATOES ,TOBACCO COMPANY ,INTERNATIONAL FUND FOR AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT ,SOIL HEALTH ,TAX ,GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT ,MILLING ,FARM ,FARM PRODUCE ,COMMODITY ,UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,TROPICAL AGRICULTURE ,VARIETY RELEASE ,AGRONOMIC RESEARCH ,LAND USE ,HORTICULTURAL CROPS ,POPULATION GROWTH ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION ,SEED LAWS ,FARM SIZE ,TRANSPORT DATA ,INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY ,AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION ,LEGUMES ,PEANUTS ,AGRICULTURAL MARKETS ,COTTON ,SEEDS ,AGRICULTURAL EXPORTS ,PUBLIC AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ,COMMERCIAL FARMS ,GRAINS ,FIELD CROPS ,SEED ,PLOWING ,ROAD QUALITY ,GATES ,RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE ,POULTRY MEAT ,IFDC ,FARMS ,FARM EQUIPMENT ,RURAL AREAS ,MAIZE PRODUCTION ,SOIL TYPES ,CASHEW NUTS ,AGRIBUSINESS FIRMS ,ROAD NETWORK ,CROP ,BREEDER SEED ,EUROPEAN COMMISSION ,SESAME ,MILLET ,FUEL PRICE ,VOLUME ,GREEN REVOLUTION ,PRIVATE SEED COMPANIES ,UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME ,AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT ,SEED PRODUCTION ,FUEL ,ACCESSIBILITY ,BRIDGE ,AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS ,FEED ,FOREIGN EXCHANGE ,SOIL FERTILITY ,ROAD SECTOR ,HYBRID SEED ,COMMERCIAL BANK ,COMMERCIAL SEED ,MEAT ,FARMER ,SEED COMPANIES ,PADDY ,POTATO ,OILSEEDS ,DOMESTIC PRODUCERS ,TRACTORS ,SUNFLOWERS ,FLEETS ,PRODUCTION SYSTEMS ,UNITED NATIONS ,AGRICULTURAL SECTOR ,AGRIBUSINESS ,TRANSPORT INDICATORS ,RURAL ROADS ,TRAFFIC ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT ,FARMER ASSOCIATIONS ,ACCESS TO CREDIT ,CERTIFIED SEED ,GRAIN ,IMPORTS ,SOYBEAN ,TRANSPORT COSTS ,AGRICULTURE FINANCE ,AMMONIUM NITRATE ,USAID ,FORESTRY ,INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH CENTER ,AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK ,AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ,FERTILIZER SUBSIDIES ,PLANTING ,CHEMICAL FERTILIZERS ,LIVESTOCK ,SEED POLICY ,AGRICULTURAL CENSUS ,SEED MULTIPLICATION ,TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM ,LABOR FORCE ,CULTIVATION ,LEVY ,HOURS OF OPERATION ,CROP YIELDS ,IFPRI ,PUBLIC WORKS ,RAILROADS ,TRANSPORT POLICY ,ANIMAL PRODUCTION ,PRODUCE ,IFAD - Abstract
Mozambique, the only Lusophone country covered in the agribusiness indicators initiative, has had a turbulent history since independence. Civil unrest over some 20 years and frequent drought in southern Mozambique, coupled with floods near the many waterways that transect the country (mainly east-west), have inhibited an agricultural transformation. Even so, Mozambique could be a regional breadbasket. The country has much potentially usable arable land, along with access to river water for irrigation in many agricultural production zones, particularly in central and northern Mozambique. Sesame, pigeon peas, and cashew exports are significant and rising, not to mention exports of industrial crops such as cotton, leaf tobacco, and sugarcane, yet production of grain and most other food crops remains stagnant. Irrigated area is way below what is possible and needed to increase yields and total agricultural output.
- Published
- 2012
36. Business models for new transport data collection methods
- Author
-
Reinau, Kristian Hegner, Polak, John, Sivakumar, Aruna, and Harder, Henrik
- Subjects
Urban design ,Data collection ,mobilitet ,Business Model ,Transport data ,forretningsmodel ,mobility - Published
- 2012
37. Urban Mass Transport Infrastructure in Medium and Large Cities in Developing Countries
- Author
-
World Bank and Asian Development Bank
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,CYCLISTS ,TRAM ,FUEL SUBSIDIES ,TRAFFIC DEMAND ,CITY TRANSPORT ,COMMUTER RAIL ,CONGESTION ,RAILWAYS ,TROLLEY BUS ,ROAD ,TRANSPORT PLANNING ,TRIPS ,EXTERNALITIES ,MASS TRANSIT SYSTEM ,PEDESTRIAN WALKWAYS ,CARS ,TRANSPORT MANAGEMENT ,CARBON EMISSIONS FROM TRANSPORT ,ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ,BICYCLE FACILITIES ,CITY BUS ,RAILWAY ,TRANSIT STATIONS ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT ,FOSSIL FUELS ,MASS TRANSIT ,AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS ,ARTERIAL ROADS ,MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS ,RIDERSHIP ,DEMAND FOR CAR OWNERSHIP ,LAND USE PATTERNS ,TRANSPORT PROBLEMS ,URBAN TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,FARES ,METROPOLITAN TRANSPORT AUTHORITY ,TRAFFIC GROWTH ,VEHICLE ENGINE ,CARBON EMISSIONS ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,URBAN TRANSPORT PLANNING ,RAIL ,TRANSPORT PROJECTS ,ROAD PRICING ,ROAD SPACE ,TRUE ,EMISSION REDUCTIONS ,VEHICLE USE ,URBAN TRANSPORTATION ,URBAN TRANSPORT POLICY ,NOISE POLLUTION ,RAPID TRANSIT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS ,ROAD DESIGN ,SUBURBAN RAIL STATIONS ,VEHICLE OWNERSHIP ,TRAVEL TIMES ,CONGESTION CHARGING ,EFFICIENT TRAVEL ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,FUEL ECONOMY ,NOISE ,ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ,SUBWAY SYSTEM ,METROPOLITAN TRANSPORT ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT SERVICES ,INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION ,PEDESTRIAN ,TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,PUBLIC TRANSIT USE ,AIR ,TRANSPORT EMISSIONS ,TRAVELERS ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,JOURNEYS ,SAFETY ,ROAD ACCIDENTS ,TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT USE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FARE STRUCTURE ,ROAD BUILDING ,TRANSPORT INVESTMENT ,LOWER CARBON EMISSIONS ,MODAL SHIFT ,ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ,ROAD TOLLS ,NONMOTORIZED TRANSPORT ,FREIGHT ,BULLET TRAIN ,TRANSPORTATION ALTERNATIVES ,SIDEWALKS ,CONGESTION PRICING ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORTATION ,FUEL TAXES ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,SUBURBAN RAIL SYSTEMS ,ROAD TRANSPORT ,INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS ,RAIL CARS ,PASSENGERS ,TRANSPORT STRATEGY ,TAX ,PERSONAL VEHICLES ,SUBURBAN RAIL ,TRANSPORTATION DEMAND ,LAND TRANSPORT AUTHORITY ,WALKING DISTANCE ,TRIP ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT MODES ,LAND USE ,POPULATION GROWTH ,TAXIS ,RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,UNDERGROUND ,VEHICLE ,INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT ,AVERAGE TRAFFIC SPEEDS ,CAPITAL INVESTMENTS ,HYBRID VEHICLES ,TRANSPORT FINANCE ,TRANSPORT DATA ,CAR ,TRANSPORT MEASURES ,STREETS ,PERSONAL MOTOR VEHICLES ,BUS STOPS ,PUBLIC TRANSIT NETWORK ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,LIGHT RAIL ,LIGHT RAIL TRANSIT ,CAPITAL INVESTMENT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION NETWORK ,CONGESTION CHARGES ,LAND TRANSPORT ,RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE ,MODAL SPLIT ,TRANSIT CORRIDORS ,POLLUTION ,INTELLIGENT TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,FARE REDUCTIONS ,ROAD SAFETY ,BUSES ,BUS SERVICES ,FUEL TAXATION ,TRAINS ,RAIL SYSTEM ,ROAD NETWORK ,MASS RAPID TRANSIT ,PEDESTRIAN NEEDS ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,MOBILITY ,PEDESTRIANS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,HIGHWAYS ,METRO RAIL ,TRAMWAY ,VEHICLE KILOMETERS ,TRAFFIC VOLUME ,RAIL LINES ,TRANSIT ,TRANSPORT DECISIONS ,FUEL ,ACCESSIBILITY ,VEHICLE FLEETS ,ROUTE ,URBAN ROAD ,TRANSPORTATION TERMINALS ,ROAD SECTOR ,TRANSPORT CORRIDORS ,SUBURBS ,DRIVING ,TRANSPORTATION INVESTMENTS ,PUBLIC TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SERVICES ,REGIONAL TRANSPORT ,SUBWAY ,GREENHOUSE GASES ,TRANSPORT DEMAND ,TRAFFIC ,DEMAND FOR MOBILITY ,ELECTRIC VEHICLES ,ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ,ROAD SYSTEMS ,RAIL LINE ,BUS ,ROAD TRAFFIC ,ROLLING STOCK ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT PROVISION ,BUS SERVICE ,RAILWAY STATIONS ,TRANSPORT ACTIVITY ,TRANSPORT FACILITIES ,SMART GROWTH ,TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM ,STREET SPACE ,INFRASTRUCTURE POLICIES ,BICYCLE LANES ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORKS ,TRANSPORT COMMUNITY ,AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES ,EMISSION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORK ,TRANSIT OPTION - Abstract
Developed at the request of the Mexican G20 Presidency for consideration by the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the G20 Leaders' Summit in Mexico, and jointly prepared with the Asian Development Bank, this policy paper positioned green transport in the context of cities development. Urban transport determines the shape of a city and its ecological footprint. Many cities in low and middle income countries are at a crossroads. Policy decisions taken now, while car use is still relatively low and cities retain a relatively transit friendly, compact urban form, will affect how people will live in their cities for many decades into the future. A new paradigm of urban transport can be part of the solution to reversing the deteriorating situation in some cities of developing countries, and supporting others to embark on a sustainable, low carbon, green growth path: developing a city for people rather than cars, and including public and mass transport as a major component of the modal structure. Implementing such a new paradigm can be truly transformational. This joint World Bank and Asian Development Bank paper lays out six aspects, which are most difficult to align, yet, are critical to ensure the sustainability of urban transport systems, visionary leadership, integrated strategy for land use and urban transport, coordination among agencies, domestic capacity, adequate cost recovery, and private participation in the operation and construction of urban transport systems. The paper proposes a set of new initiatives for G20 leaders' consideration, including the development of an umbrella toolkit to guide policy makers in charge of urban planning to make transport decisions best suited to their local contexts.
- Published
- 2012
38. Logistics Costs and Competitiveness : Measurement and Trade Policy Applications
- Author
-
Shepherd, Ben
- Subjects
MARKET ACCESS ,END USERS ,TRANSPORT AGENCIES ,VALUE ADDED ,TARIFF BARRIERS ,ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION ,ROAD ,TRADE LOGISTICS ,MACROECONOMICS ,WAREHOUSING ,PRODUCTIVITY ,FREIGHT FORWARDING ,DATA LIMITATIONS ,COMPETITIVENESS ,TRADE FACILITATION ,TRADE PERFORMANCE ,TRANSPORT DATA ,LICENSES ,PER CAPITA INCOME ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,E-MAIL ,TRADE POLICY ,OUTSOURCING ,INVENTORIES ,PDF ,DATA ELEMENT ,TOTAL COSTS ,GLOBAL ECONOMY ,PURCHASING POWER ,TRADE BARRIERS ,ROAD PROJECTS ,BOOKMARK ,DATA COVERAGE ,ELASTICITY ,GDP PER CAPITA ,TRANSPORT ACTIVITIES ,COPYRIGHT ,ENTERPRISE SURVEYS ,INCOME LEVELS ,TRUE ,TRADITIONAL MARKET ,NATIONAL LOGISTICS ,COLLECTION OF DATA ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON ,TELEPHONE ,AGRICULTURE ,PRODUCTION PROCESS ,ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ,ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ,FUEL ,FUTURE RESEARCH ,WTO ,GDP ,MANUFACTURING ,COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY ,TRADE OUTCOMES ,BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT ,POLITICAL ECONOMY ,LOGISTICS COSTS ,RESULT ,EXPORTS ,SHIPPING ,ECONOMIC OUTCOMES ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,PRICE COMPARISONS ,USES ,TRANSPORT RESEARCH ,NETWORKS ,TIME PERIODS ,RETAIL TRADE ,SUPPLY CHAIN ,TRANSACTIONS COSTS ,CUSTOM ,PRIVATE SECTOR ,BUSINESS LOGISTICS ,BILATERAL TRADE ,INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,LOGISTICS PROVIDERS ,SHIPMENTS ,AD VALOREM ,TRANSPORT COSTS ,FREIGHT ,MATERIAL ,PASSENGER SERVICES ,PERFORMANCE MEASURES ,TRADE DATABASES ,TRANSPORT SERVICES EXPORTS ,RESULTS ,LOGISTICS EXPENDITURES ,NEW MARKETS ,COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ,TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORTATION ,TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY ,INTERNATIONAL LOGISTICS ,QUERIES ,PERFORMANCE MEASURE ,TRANSACTION - Abstract
This paper examines the issue of measuring logistics costs from an applied trade policy research perspective, as well as identifying logistics-intensive sectors. It focuses on currently available data at the macro-and firm-levels. This paper has two main aims. First, it provides a first overview of currently available data relevant to logistics, and suggests some preliminary applications. The second objective of this paper is to frame the issue of logistics cost measurement and data collection in terms of the types of inputs needed for applied trade policy research. The paper is organized as follows. The next section presents an overview of possible directions in applied trade policy research using logistics data. Section three examines existing data sources that can be used to measure domestic logistics costs, focusing on the national accounts, input-output tables, price comparisons, and firm-level data. Section four presents a new methodology for measuring international trade costs, and identifies the proportion of those costs due to logistics. Section five uses input-output data to identify logistics-intensive sectors in a range of countries. Section six concludes. This paper has explored a number of different data sources and methodologies in an effort to move forward on the analysis of logistics costs from a trade policy research perspective. In the future, it will be important to distinguish between data collection efforts that are industry-driven-such as estimates of total logistics costs in Gross Domestic Product (GDP)-and those that are research-driven. Moving further in this direction will help fuel research that identifies sectors in particular countries that are most sensitive to improvements in logistics performance, and which therefore will tend to expand relative to other sectors in the face of logistics sector reforms. From a policy and political economy point of view, it will be important to identify such sectors and make them aware of the potential role logistics can play in facilitating their growth.
- Published
- 2011
39. Stimulating or frustrating research? Transport geography and (un)available data
- Author
-
Dobruszkes, Frédéric and Dobruszkes, Frédéric
- Abstract
This paper addresses the concern of data in line with transport geography. Focusing mainly on data availability, it highlights how data on both transport and spaces are important to transport geography. More and more data are becoming available on infrastructures and scheduled services, although often expensive, and on spaces. In contrast, non-scheduled services, freight transport and the demand remain or are becoming largely unknown. This opens and closes doors to transport geographers, paradoxically at the time when post-modernist postures tend to despise figures., info:eu-repo/semantics/published, Freely available at http://belgeo.revues.org/7082
- Published
- 2012
40. Conceptual data model for the integrated travel survey and spatial data
- Author
-
Chalasani, V.S. and Axhausen, Kay W.
- Subjects
ENTITY-RELATIONSHIP-DATENMODELLE (INFORMATIONSSYSTEME) ,Geo-data ,DATA COLLECTION (PHYSICAL PLANNING) ,Transport survey ,Entity-relationship model ,Transport data ,Data modelling ,ENTITY-RELATIONSHIP DATA MODELS (INFORMATION SYSTEMS) ,TRANSPORT STATISTICS + TRAFFIC CENSUS (TRANSPORTATION AND TRAFFIC) ,VERKEHRSSTATISTIK + VERKEHRSZÄHLUNG (VERKEHR UND TRANSPORT) ,Geographic data ,VERKEHRSMODELLE + VERKEHRSSIMULATION (VERKEHR UND TRANSPORT) ,Conceptual data model ,TRANSPORT MODELS + TRAFFIC SIMULATION (TRANSPORTATION AND TRAFFIC) ,DATENERHEBUNG (RAUMPLANUNG) ,COMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN TRAFFIC AND TRANSPORTATION ,COMPUTERANWENDUNGEN IN VERKEHR UND TRANSPORT ,ddc:380 ,Commerce, communications, transport ,Data processing, computer science ,ddc:004 - Abstract
Everyone involved in transport and spatial planning is at some stage involved with data production or analysis. Each transport survey is conducted for a set of objectives. Data obtained from these transport surveys do not follow any specific pattern, and are thus difficult to understand. At the same time, a re-search organization conducts a wide variety of surveys ranging from simple road-side interviews to the complex travel diaries, which can be either longitudinal or cross-sectional, and differences in methodology, design, and protocols will often obscure basic similarities between them. Above all, it is almost impossible to collect complete information about the existing transportation system in a single survey. Most transport surveys collect partial information and depend on other sources for more. To under-stand the interactions between the datasets obtained from different surveys, a conceptual data model as a platform to integrate transport and spatial was developed. Both the transport data and spatial data were broadly classified. Transport data was classified as travel survey data, transport data (infrastructure), and transport data (functional); Spatial data were classified into geographic data and geo-data. Individual data models were developed for each classification. These data models help in streamlining the data from longitudinal surveys and standardizing the data from cross-sectional surveys. As a final step, the independent models are integrated into a single conceptual data model that represents integrated transport and spatial data. This final model facilitates easy understanding of the relationships between various data sources and allows the users to pass the information between them., Arbeitsberichte Verkehrs- und Raumplanung, 302
- Published
- 2005
41. Transport Data Policy in Germany
- Author
-
Schulz, Angelika
- Subjects
transportation ,Verkehr ,Verkehrsdaten ,data infrastructure ,Transport ,data dissemination ,Dateninfrastruktur ,transport statistics ,transportation planning ,Verkehrsplanung ,transport infrastructure ,transport data ,Verkehrspolitik ,transport policy ,Verkehrsinfrastruktur ,Verkehrsstatistik ,Datenbereitstellung - Published
- 2005
42. Data integration for urban transport planning
- Author
-
Huang, Zhendong and University Utrecht
- Subjects
transport data ,location referencing ,data sharing ,urban transport planning ,areal data disaggregation ,data representation ,Sociale Geografie & Planologie ,GIS ,data integration - Abstract
Urban transport planning aims at balancing conflicting challenges by promoting more efficient transport systems while reducing negative impacts. The availability of better and more reliable data has not only stimulated new planning methodologies, but also created challenges for efficient data management and data integration. The major focus of this study is to improve methodologies for representing and integrating multi-source and multi-format urban transport data. This research approaches the issue of data integration based on the classification of urban transport data both from a functional and a representational perspective. The functional perspective considers characteristics of the urban transport system and planning requirements, and categorises data into supply, demand, performance and impact. The representational perspective considers transport data in terms of their spatial and non-spatial characteristics that are important for data representation. These two perspectives correspond to institutional and methodological data integration respectively, and are the foundation of transport data integration. This research is based on the city of Wuhan in China. The methodological issues of transport data integration are based on the representational perspective. A framework for data integration has been put forward, in which spatial data are classified as point, linear and areal types, and the non-spatial data are sorted out as values and temporal attributes. This research has respectively probed the integration of point, linear and areal transport data within a GIS environment. The locations of socio-economic activities are point-type data that need to be spatially referenced. A location referencing process requires a referencing base, source address units and referencing methods. The referencing base consists of such spatial features as streets, street addresses, points of interest and publicly known zones. These referencing bases have different levels of spatial preciseness and have to be kept in a hierarchy. Source addresses in Chinese cities are usually written as one sentence, which has to be divided into address units for automatic geo-coding. As it is difficult to separate from the sentences, the address units have to be clearly identified in survey forms. Depending on the types of address units, the referencing process makes use of either semantic name matching or address matching to link source addresses to features in the referencing base. The name-based and road-based referencing schemes constitute a comprehensive location referencing framework that is applicable to Chinese cities. The relationship between two sets of linear features can be identified with spatial overlay in the case of independent representation, or with internal linkage in a dependent representation. The bus line is such a feature that runs on the street network and can be dependently referenced by streets. In the heavily bus-oriented city of Wuhan, bus lines constitute a large public transit network that is important to transport planning and management. This research has extended conventional bus line representation to a more detailed level. Each bus line has been differentiated as two directional routes that are defined separately with reference to the street network. Accordingly, individual route stops are also represented in the database. These stop sites are spatial features with geometry that are linked to street segments and bus routes by linear location referencing methods. A data model linking base street network, bus lines and routes, line and route stops, and other bus operations data has been constructed. The benefits of the detailed model have been demonstrated in several transport applications. Zonal data transitions include three types of operations, i.e. aggregation, areal interpolation and disaggregation. This study focuses on disaggregating data from larger zones to smaller zones. In the context of Wuhan, zonal data disaggregation involves the allocation of statistical data from statistical units to smaller parcels. Given the availability of land use data, a weighted approach reflecting spatial variations has been applied in the disaggregation process. Two technical processes for disaggregation have been examined. Weighted area-weighting (WAW) is an adaptation of the classic area-weighting method, and Monte Carlo simulation (MC) is a stochastic process based on a raster data model. The MC outcome is more convenient for subsequent re-aggregation, and is also directly available for micro-simulation. An important contribution arising from this zonal integration study is that two standardised disaggregation tools have been developed within a GIS environment. The research has also explored the institutional aspect of data integration. The findings of this study show that there is generally a good institutional transport structure in the city of Wuhan and that there is also a growing awareness of using information technology. Professional cooperation exists among transport organisations, but not yet at a level for data sharing. An integrated data support framework requires data sharing. In such a framework, it should be possible to know where to get data for specific transport studies, or which kind of research an institution supports.
- Published
- 2003
43. Data integration for urban transport planning
- Subjects
transport data ,location referencing ,data sharing ,urban transport planning ,areal data disaggregation ,data representation ,GIS ,data integration - Abstract
Urban transport planning aims at balancing conflicting challenges by promoting more efficient transport systems while reducing negative impacts. The availability of better and more reliable data has not only stimulated new planning methodologies, but also created challenges for efficient data management and data integration. The major focus of this study is to improve methodologies for representing and integrating multi-source and multi-format urban transport data. This research approaches the issue of data integration based on the classification of urban transport data both from a functional and a representational perspective. The functional perspective considers characteristics of the urban transport system and planning requirements, and categorises data into supply, demand, performance and impact. The representational perspective considers transport data in terms of their spatial and non-spatial characteristics that are important for data representation. These two perspectives correspond to institutional and methodological data integration respectively, and are the foundation of transport data integration. This research is based on the city of Wuhan in China. The methodological issues of transport data integration are based on the representational perspective. A framework for data integration has been put forward, in which spatial data are classified as point, linear and areal types, and the non-spatial data are sorted out as values and temporal attributes. This research has respectively probed the integration of point, linear and areal transport data within a GIS environment. The locations of socio-economic activities are point-type data that need to be spatially referenced. A location referencing process requires a referencing base, source address units and referencing methods. The referencing base consists of such spatial features as streets, street addresses, points of interest and publicly known zones. These referencing bases have different levels of spatial preciseness and have to be kept in a hierarchy. Source addresses in Chinese cities are usually written as one sentence, which has to be divided into address units for automatic geo-coding. As it is difficult to separate from the sentences, the address units have to be clearly identified in survey forms. Depending on the types of address units, the referencing process makes use of either semantic name matching or address matching to link source addresses to features in the referencing base. The name-based and road-based referencing schemes constitute a comprehensive location referencing framework that is applicable to Chinese cities. The relationship between two sets of linear features can be identified with spatial overlay in the case of independent representation, or with internal linkage in a dependent representation. The bus line is such a feature that runs on the street network and can be dependently referenced by streets. In the heavily bus-oriented city of Wuhan, bus lines constitute a large public transit network that is important to transport planning and management. This research has extended conventional bus line representation to a more detailed level. Each bus line has been differentiated as two directional routes that are defined separately with reference to the street network. Accordingly, individual route stops are also represented in the database. These stop sites are spatial features with geometry that are linked to street segments and bus routes by linear location referencing methods. A data model linking base street network, bus lines and routes, line and route stops, and other bus operations data has been constructed. The benefits of the detailed model have been demonstrated in several transport applications. Zonal data transitions include three types of operations, i.e. aggregation, areal interpolation and disaggregation. This study focuses on disaggregating data from larger zones to smaller zones. In the context of Wuhan, zonal data disaggregation involves the allocation of statistical data from statistical units to smaller parcels. Given the availability of land use data, a weighted approach reflecting spatial variations has been applied in the disaggregation process. Two technical processes for disaggregation have been examined. Weighted area-weighting (WAW) is an adaptation of the classic area-weighting method, and Monte Carlo simulation (MC) is a stochastic process based on a raster data model. The MC outcome is more convenient for subsequent re-aggregation, and is also directly available for micro-simulation. An important contribution arising from this zonal integration study is that two standardised disaggregation tools have been developed within a GIS environment. The research has also explored the institutional aspect of data integration. The findings of this study show that there is generally a good institutional transport structure in the city of Wuhan and that there is also a growing awareness of using information technology. Professional cooperation exists among transport organisations, but not yet at a level for data sharing. An integrated data support framework requires data sharing. In such a framework, it should be possible to know where to get data for specific transport studies, or which kind of research an institution supports.
- Published
- 2003
44. Goods Transport Modelling, Vol 1:Data and Methodologies
- Author
-
Petersen, Morten Steen (red.) and Kristiansen, Jørgen
- Subjects
Goods transport ,Denmark ,Transport ,Transport systems ,Transport data ,The Danish Transport Council ,Transport policy ,Transport models - Abstract
The report is a study of data requirements and methodologies for goods transport. The study is intended to provide the basis for general discussion about the application of goods transport models in Denmark. The report provides an overview of different types of models and data availability.
- Published
- 2002
45. Local Transport Policy and Planning:The Capacity to deal with Environmental Issues
- Author
-
Hansen, Carsten Jahn
- Subjects
Groningen ,Transport planning ,Transport ,Transport systems ,Aalborg ,Transport policy ,Transport data ,Environment - Abstract
The Ph. D. thesis describes and analyses how environmental obejctives and strategies have materialised in the real-life context of local transport policies and plans, how environmental perspectives have been picked up by policy makers concerned with transport issues, how policy and planning processes have been effected.
- Published
- 2002
46. Trade in international maritime services : how much does policy matter?
- Author
-
Fink, Carsten, Mattoo, Carsten, and Neagu, Ileana Cristina
- Subjects
ALTERNATIVE MODES OF TRANSPORTATION ,CUSTOMS ,MARKET ACCESS ,PASSENGERS ,TRANSPORTATION SERVICE ,MARKET POWER ,MERCHANT MARINES ,TRANSPORT PRICE ,PORT REFORM ,CARGO HANDLING ,CARRIER ,INVENTORY ,TRANSPORT OPERATIONS ,COMMODITIES ,PORT PERFORMANCE ,COST INCREASES ,CONTAINER TERMINALS ,ROAD ,INTERNATIONAL CONTAINER TERMINAL ,COMMODITY ,ROUTES ,DOMESTIC MARKET ,TRANSPORTATION COSTS ,PRICE STABILITY ,ADVERTISING ,WAREHOUSING ,CRUDE OIL ,FREIGHT FORWARDING ,TRANSPORT ECONOMICS ,CONTAINERIZED CARGO ,TRAMP SHIPPING ,MARITIME INDUSTRY ,SHIPPERS ,TRAFFIC CROSSING ,TRANSPORT DATA ,CARRIERS ,CONTESTABLE MARKET ,MARITIME SECTOR ,NAVIGATION ,PORT AUTHORITY ,PORT OF ENTRY ,SHIPPING LINES ,LONGER DISTANCES ,COMMERCIAL POLICY ,MARITIME SERVICES ,MERCHANDISE ,PRICE FIXING ,PORT ASSETS ,CONTAINERIZATION ,CABOTAGE ,MARITIME TRANSPORT ,NAVIGATION AIDS ,FARES ,ELASTICITY ,FOREIGN PORTS ,Transport and Trade Logistics,Ports&Waterways,Common Carriers Industry,Environmental Economics&Policies,Economic Theory&Research ,TERMINAL OPERATORS ,CUSTOMS DUTIES ,MOBILITY ,CUSTOMS CLEARANCE ,OCEAN FREIGHT RATES ,HARBORS ,MARITIME TRANSPORTATION ,LANDLOCKED COUNTRIES ,TRANSIT ,CONTESTABILITY ,MODES OF TRANSPORT ,SHIPPING COMPANIES ,CONTAINERS ,MANUFACTURING ,ROUTE ,CARGO RATES ,PRICE SETTING ,FOREIGN SHIPS ,SHIPPING CONFERENCES ,OCEAN CARRIERS ,AIR ,TRANSPORT SERVICE ,SHIPPING ,MONOPOLY ,PORT CONCESSIONS ,INTERNATIONAL TRADE ,MARITIME POLICY MANAGEMENT ,POLICE ,SUPPLIERS ,BERTHING ,JOURNEY ,MARKET FORCES ,SAFETY ,LINER SHIPPING ,SPREAD ,TRAFFIC DISTRIBUTION ,SHIPPING INDUSTRY ,TONNAGE ,SHIPPING COMPANY ,DEMAND ELASTICITIES ,LINER OPERATORS ,ECONOMIC EFFECTS ,MERCHANDISE IMPORTS ,PORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,COMMERCE ,TRANSPORT DEMAND ,TRAFFIC ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,AIR SERVICES ,CARGO ,FIXED COSTS ,ALTERNATIVE MODES ,SHIPS ,INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING ,SHIPMENTS ,DRY BULK ,SHIPPING ROUTES ,LINER SERVICES ,MARKET SHARE ,SEAPORTS ,SHIPPING RATES ,TRANSPORT COSTS ,PRICE COMPETITION ,FREIGHT ,PROFITABLE ROUTES ,AIR TRANSPORT ,ELASTICITY OF DEMAND ,STEVEDORING ,TRANSPORT CHARGES ,PORT AUTHORITIES ,MODE OF TRANSPORT ,LINER CONFERENCES ,SHIPPING CHARGES ,ECONOMIES OF SCALE ,BIDDING ,TRANSPORTATION ,SHIP OWNERS ,PORTS ,MARITIME POLICY ,MARKET SEGMENTS ,PREDATORY PRICING ,COMMON CARRIERS ,INTERNATIONAL TRANSPORT ,FREIGHT TRANSPORT ,OCEAN FREIGHT ,ROAD TRANSPORT ,VOLATILITY ,TOWING - Abstract
Maritime transport costs significantly impede international trade. This article examines why these costs are so high in some countries and quantifies the importance of two explanations: restrictive trade policies and private anticompetitive practices. It finds that both matter, but the latter have a greater impact. Trade liberalization and the breakup of private carrier agreements would lead to an average of one-third lower liner transport prices and to cost savings of up to US dollar 3 billion on goods carried to the United States alone. The policy implications are clear: there is a need not only for further liberalization of government policy but also for strengthened international disciplines on restrictive business practices. The authors propose an approach to developing such disciplines in the current round of services negotiations at the World Trade Organization (WTO).
- Published
- 2001
47. Building free and managing a World-Wide-Web interface for travel diary data and statistics
- Subjects
transport data ,surveys ,statistics ,free software ,interface ,WWW - Published
- 2000
48. Presenting and preserving travel data
- Author
-
Axhausen, Kay W.
- Subjects
Data collection ,Transport Data ,Archive ,WWW ,Guidelines - Abstract
Transportation Research Circular, E-C008, ISSN:0097-8515
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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