Skip to content
Paper
Published: 2015
Journal/Book: Journal of Intelligent Transportation Systems: Technology, Planning, and Operations
Summary:
Truck probe data collected by global positioning system (GPS) devices has gained increased attention as a source of truck mobility data, including measuring truck travel time reliability. Most reliability studies that apply GPS data are based on travel time observations retrieved from GPS data. The major challenges to using GPS data are small, nonrandom observation sets and low reading frequency.
Paper
Published: 2013
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Wenjuan Zhao, Daniel J. Dailey, Eric Scharnhorst
Journal/Book: American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) Journal of Transportation Engineering
Summary:
This paper describes the development of a systematic methodology for identifying and ranking bottlenecks using probe data collected by commercial global positioning system fleet management devices mounted on trucks. These data are processed in a geographic information system and assigned to a roadway network to provide performance measures for individual segments.
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 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, 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: 2006
Authors: Dr. Ed McCormack, Mark Hallenbeck
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record
Summary:
This paper documents the development of data collection methodologies that can be used to measure truck movements along specific roadway corridors in Washington State cost-effectively. The intent of this study was to design and test methodologies that could provide information to ascertain the performance of freight mobility roadway improvement projects. The benchmarks created would be used to report on speed and volume improvements that resulted from completed roadway projects.
Paper
Published: 2016
Authors: Dr. Anne GoodchildDr. Ed McCormack, Erica Wygonik, Alon Bassok, Daniel Carlson
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record
Summary:
Many urban planning efforts have supported development in dense, mixed-use areas, but tools are not widely available to help understand the relationship between urban form and goods movement. A review is presented on the status of urban goods movement forecasting models to account for the impacts of density and mixed land use. A description is given of a series of forecasting model runs conducted with state-of-the-practice tools available at the Puget Sound Regional Council.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Zun Wang
Journal/Book: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
Roadway tolls are designed to raise revenue to fund transportation investments and manage travel demand and as such may affect transportation system performance and route choice. Yet, limited research has quantified the impact of tolling on truck speed and route choice because of the lack of truck-specific movement data.
Paper
Published: 2016
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Jesus Gonzalez-Feliu, David Guerrero
Journal/Book: European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Research
Summary:
Freight transport is a challenging economic sector, as it is essential for the functioning of production and distribution systems but and the same time is at the origin of many nuisances such as congestion, greenhouse gas emissions, pollution and noise. When responding to these issues, planners dispose nowadays of a growing body of freight data that can be used for the implementation of policies towards achieving smart mobility.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Dandan Wang, Xiaoping Li, and Zun Wang
Journal/Book: Journal of Applied Mathematics
Summary:
This paper introduces a novel quay crane design, a double girder bridge crane (DGBC). DGBC is capable of handling containers of two adjacent bays simultaneously, avoiding crane collisions, saving traveling and repositioning costs, and eventually improving terminal efficiency. This problem is formulated as a resource-constrained project scheduling to minimize the maximum completion time.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Erica Wygonik, Daniel Holder, B. McMullen
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
As available data have increased and as the national transportation funding bills have moved toward objective evaluation, departments of transportation (DOTs) throughout the United States have begun to develop tools to attempt to measure the effects of different projects. Increasingly, DOTs recognize that the freight transportation system is necessarily multimodal. However, no DOTs have clearly stated objective tools with which to evaluate multimodal freight project comparisons.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Laetitia Dablanc, Scott Ogilvie
Journal/Book: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
Summary:
The warehousing industry experienced a period of rapid growth from 1998 to 2009. This paper compares how the geographic distribution of warehouses changed in both the Los Angeles and Seattle Metropolitan Areas over that time period. These two west coast cities were chosen due to their geographic spread and proximity to major ports as well as their difference in size.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Maura Rowell, Andrea Gagliano
Journal/Book: Transportation Letters
Summary:
This article identifies the truck routing priorities of freight companies through a survey of Washington state shippers, carriers, and receivers. To elicit these priorities, the survey prompted the respondents to rate 15 items believed to affect route choice decision making with respect to each item’s influence on route choice.
Published: 2012
Authors: Dr. Anne Goodchild, Derik Andreoli, Eric Jessup
Journal/Book: Transportation Letters
Summary:
Currently, knowledge of actual freight flows in the US is insufficient at a level of geographic resolution that permits corridor-level freight transportation analysis and planning. Commodity specific origins, destinations, and routes are typically estimated from four-step models or commodity flow models. At a sub-regional level, both of these families of models are built on important assumptions driven by the limited availability of data.
Paper
Published: 2014
Authors: Dr. Anne GoodchildDr. Ed McCormack, Erica Wygonik, Alon Bassok, Daniel Carlson
Journal/Book: Journal of Urbanism
Summary:
While recent urban planning efforts have focused on smart growth development and management of growth into developed areas, the research community has not examined the impacts of these development patterns on urban goods movement. Successful implementation of growth strategies has multiple environmental and social benefits, but it also raises the demand for intraurban goods movement, potentially increasing conflicts between modes of travel and worsening air quality.