1 Introduction to Transportation Systems. 2 PART I: CONTEXT, CONCEPTS AND CHARACTERIZATI ON.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
international strategic management
Advertisements

Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Theory: Sticky Wages and Prices.
Advanced Piloting Cruise Plot.
Terms. 1. Globalization 2. Financing 3. Inputs.
Objectives Know why companies use distribution channels and understand the functions that these channels perform. Learn how channel members interact and.
CHAPTER 4 Environmental Scanning and Industry Analysis
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 1.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 15 Money, Inflation and Banking.
© 2008 Pearson Addison Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter Seven Costs.
Inventory Systems for Dependent Demand
Chapter 1 The Study of Body Function Image PowerPoint
and 6.855J Cycle Canceling Algorithm. 2 A minimum cost flow problem , $4 20, $1 20, $2 25, $2 25, $5 20, $6 30, $
Introduction to Transportation Systems. PART I: CONTEXT, CONCEPTS AND CHARACTERIZATION.
Smarter Travel Programmes– Financial impacts for Transport for London COLIN BUCHANAN
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
Summary of Convergence Tests for Series and Solved Problems
Regional Routing Model Review: C) Model Formulation and Scenario Analysis Frank Southworth Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge, TN NETS Program.
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 6 Q 11 Q 16 Q 21 Q 2 Q 7 Q 12 Q 17 Q 22 Q 3 Q 8 Q 13
“Review Study Guide nightly”
FACTORING ax2 + bx + c Think “unfoil” Work down, Show all steps.
1 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt FactorsFactors.
What is economics?.
Introduction When you choose a restaurant for a meal, are you concerned with: The price of the meal How long you have to wait to be seated The quality.
Chapter 18 Methodology – Monitoring and Tuning the Operational System Transparencies © Pearson Education Limited 1995, 2005.
What Is Cost Control? 1 Controlling Foodservice Costs OH 1-1.
formulation of national trade policies
ABC Technology Project
Real Estate Market Analysis
SCATTER workshop, Milan, 24 October 2003 Testing selected solutions to control urban sprawl The Brussels case city.
Capacity Planning For Products and Services
Journey Management Nigel DAth Journey Manager Bay of Plenty RTIM Seminar 18 March 2014.
VOORBLAD.
1 Breadth First Search s s Undiscovered Discovered Finished Queue: s Top of queue 2 1 Shortest path from s.
New-Product Development and Product Life-Cycle Strategies
BIOLOGY AUGUST 2013 OPENING ASSIGNMENTS. AUGUST 7, 2013  Question goes here!
Factor P 16 8(8-5ab) 4(d² + 4) 3rs(2r – s) 15cd(1 + 2cd) 8(4a² + 3b²)
© 2012 National Heart Foundation of Australia. Slide 2.
Understanding Generalist Practice, 5e, Kirst-Ashman/Hull
MANAGEMENT RICHARD L. DAFT.
25 seconds left…...
Copyright 2001 Advanced Strategies, Inc. 1 Data Bridging An Overview Prepared for DIGIT By Advanced Strategies, Inc.
Januar MDMDFSSMDMDFSSS
Analyzing Genes and Genomes
We will resume in: 25 Minutes.
©Brooks/Cole, 2001 Chapter 12 Derived Types-- Enumerated, Structure and Union.
Essential Cell Biology
Principles of Marketing
Marketing Strategy and the Marketing Plan
Intracellular Compartments and Transport
PSSA Preparation.
VPN AND REMOTE ACCESS Mohammad S. Hasan 1 VPN and Remote Access.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 11 Development Policymaking and the Roles of Market, State, and Civil Society.
Immunobiology: The Immune System in Health & Disease Sixth Edition
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 11 Market-Clearing Models of the Business Cycle.
Essential Cell Biology
Organization Theory and Health Services Management
Immunobiology: The Immune System in Health & Disease Sixth Edition
16-1©2005 Prentice Hall 13 Organizational Design and Structure Chapter 13 Organizational Design and Structure.
Global Manufacturing and Materials Management
Globalization and International Trade Lecture 8 – academic year 2014/15 Introduction to Economics Fabio Landini.
Economic Systems.
1 Introduction to Transportation Systems. 2 PART I: –CONTEXT, CONCEPTS AND CHARACTERIZATION.
Introduction to Transportation Systems. PART I: CONTEXT, CONCEPTS AND CHARACTERIZATION.
Introduction to Transportation Systems. PART I: CONTEXT, CONCEPTS AND CHARACTERIZATIO N.
Chapter 3 Supply Chain Drivers and Obstacles
Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Transportation Systems

2 PART I: CONTEXT, CONCEPTS AND CHARACTERIZATI ON

3 Chapter 9: Transportation Systems: Key Points 25-30

4 A New Concept: Network Behavior Redundancy in Routes --to go from A to C, we can travel A-B-C A-B-E-C A-B-E-D-C A-E-B-C A-E-C A-E-D-C

5 Congestion Congestion at a choke-point can propagate throughout the network Highway Examples in your city? Air Transportation Examples in your country?

6 Key Point 25: Network Behavior and Capacity Network behavior and network capacity, derived from link and node capacities and readjustment of flows on redundant paths, are important elements in transportation systems analysis.

7 Stochasticity The concept of stochasticity in transportation system performance. Here we refer to random effects in the way transportation systems operate and respond to external stimuli. Examples: Weather Peoples Behavior CLASS DISCUSSION Recurring vs. Non-Recurring Congestion

8 Key Point 26: Stochasticity Stochasticity -- in supply and demand -- is characteristic of transportation systems.

9 Stochasticity Stochasticity in traffic volume is different than peaking. Figure 9.1

10 Key Point 27: Transportation, Economic Development and Land Use The relationship among transportation, economic development, and location of activities -- the transportation/ land-use connection -- is fundamental.

11 Two Cities and Their Economies ECONOMIC ADVANTAGE IN MANUFACTURING ECONOMIC ADVANTAGE IN AGRICULTURE Figure 9.2

12 Shifts in Activity Base Related to Transportation The importance of transportation investment and the shift of activities to areas of cheap transportation. Certainly, transportation investment, if intelligently made, is something that can have a positive impact on economic activity and on quality of life. But, If we make a poor investment in infrastructure, we may be worse-off because those same resources could have been used in some better way.

13 The Rule of 45 Minutes Urban planners talk about the rule of 45 minutes as something they argue has been relatively constant over human history. People are willing to travel 45 minutes to work. As technology enables faster travel, the size of cities grows, with the rule of 45 minutes (approximately) holding.

14 Measuring Transportation System Performance What do your customers perceive? Our ways of measuring performance have to relate to the ways in which our customers make decisions about whether to use us or our competitors.

15 Performance Measures and Cost A second concept is that performance measures have to relate to costs of operations and revenues derived from operations of those systems. The customer cares about system performance (e.g., overall travel time), but A third concept: System vs. Component Performance. The operation is often managed on a component basis. The hope is, if we do a good job of operating the components, the system as a whole will operate well. Usually, it is a necessary condition that component operation be effective for system operation to be effective, but it is very often not a sufficient condition. We can have a poorly meshed system in which the components are operating well, but the system performance is still poor.

16 Performance Measures and Behavior People (and organizations) respond to incentives.

17 Key Point 28: Performance Measures Performance measures shape transportation operations and investment. CLASS DISCUSSION Some examples from transportation systems you are familiar with.

18 Key Point 29: Balancing Centralized with Decentralized Decisions Balancing centralized control with decisions made by managers of system components (e.g., terminals) is an important operating challenge.

19 Key Point 30: Integrality of Vehicle/Infrastructure/Control Systems Decisions The integrality of vehicle/ infrastructure/control systems investment, design and operating decisions is basic to transportation systems design.

20 Key Points -- Summary (1) 1.People and organizations alter behavior based on transportation service expectations. 2.Transportation service is part of a broader system -- economic, social and political in nature. 3.Competition (or its absence) for customers by operators is a critical determinant of the availability of quality transportation service. 4.Analyzing the flow of vehicles on transportation networks, and defining and measuring their cycle, is a basic element of transportation systems analysis. 5.Queuing for service and for customers and storage for vehicles/freight/travelers, etc., are fundamental elements of transportation systems.

21 Key Points -- Summary (2) 6.Intermodal and intramodal transfers are key determinants of service quality and cost. 7.Operating policy affects level-of-service. 8.Capacity is a complex, multi-dimensional system characteristic affected by: infrastructure vehicles technology labor institutional factors operating policy external factors (e.g., clean air, safety, regulation). 9.Level-of-service = f(volume); Transportation Supply. As volume approaches capacity, level-of-service deteriorates dramatically -- the hockey stick phenomenon. 10.The availability of information (or the lack) drives system operations and investment and customer choices.

22 Key Points -- Summary (3) 11.The shape of transportation infrastructure impacts the fabric of geo-economic structures. 12.The cost of providing a specific service, the price charged for that service, and the level- of-service provided may not be consistent. 13.The computation of cost for providing specific services is complex and often ambiguous. 14.Cost/level-of-service trade-offs are a fundamental tension for the transportation provider and for the transportation customer, as well as between them. 15.Consolidation of like-demands is often used as a cost-minimizing strategy.

23 Key Points -- Summary (4) 16.Investments in capacity are often lumpy (e.g., infrastructure). 17.The linkages between capacity, cost and level-of- service -- the lumpiness of investment juxtaposed with the hockey stick level-of-service function as volume approaches capacity -- is the central challenge of transportation systems design.. 18.Temporal peaking in demand: a fundamental issue is design capacity -- how often do we not satisfy demand?. 19.Volume = f (level-of-service); Transportation Demand. 20.Level-of-service is usually multi-dimensional. For analysis purposes, we often need to reduce it to a single dimension, which we call utility.

24 Key Points -- Summary (5) 21.Different transportation system components and relevant external systems operate and change at different time scales, e.g., Short run -- operating policy Medium run -- auto ownership Long run -- infrastructure, land use 22.Equilibration of transportation supply and demand for transportation service to predict volume is a fundamental network analysis methodology. 23.Pricing of transportation services to entice different behavior is a mechanism for lowering the negative externalities caused by transportation users on other users and society-at-large. 24.Geographical and temporal imbalances of flow are characteristic in transportation systems. 25.Network behavior and network capacity, derived from link and node capacities and readjustment of flows on redundant paths, are important elements in transportation systems analysis.

25 Key Points -- Summary (6) 26.Stochasticity -- in supply and demand -- is characteristic of transportation systems. 27.The relationship among transportation, economic development, and location of activities -- the transportation/land-use connection -- is fundamental. 28.Performance measures shape transportation operations and investment. 29.Balancing centralized control with decisions made by managers of system components (e.g., terminals) is an important operating challenge. 30.The integrality of vehicle/infrastructure/ control systems investment, design and operating decisions is basic to transportation systems design.

26 Having completed our Key Points discussion as an introduction to transportation systems, we now proceed to discuss models and frameworks that are useful in the transportation context.