1 / 85

Geog 111A-211A Overview

Geog 111A-211A Overview. Fall 2006. Dynamic Planning Practice. Evolving Paradigm of Modeling and Simulation. New Research and Technology. Sustainable and Green Visions. The Three Pillars. Note: Modeling and Simulation includes quantitative and qualitative nature.

ethel
Download Presentation

Geog 111A-211A Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Geog 111A-211A Overview Fall 2006

  2. Dynamic Planning Practice Evolving Paradigm of Modeling and Simulation New Research and Technology Sustainable and Green Visions The Three Pillars Note: Modeling and Simulation includes quantitative and qualitative nature

  3. Recall Activity-based Example

  4. Penn State Evacuation Model • Sajjad Alam, MS, 1996(simplified model of the PennState campus life) • Application for general planning, circulation plan, emergency operations, and special events

  5. Used Activity Diary to Derive Time of Day Profiles Personal needs (includes sleep) Paid work Education Eat Meal Travel

  6. Activity Participation - Students

  7. Activity Participation - Faculty

  8. Activity Participation - Staff

  9. Assembled • Administrative records • Building characteristics • Developed attractiveness indicators (a gravity/distance model) • A survey of activity participation • A method to sequence activity participation

  10. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  11. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  12. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  13. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  14. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  15. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  16. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  17. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  18. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  19. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  20. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  21. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  22. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  23. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  24. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  25. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  26. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  27. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  28. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  29. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  30. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  31. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  32. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  33. Dynamic Presence on Campus

  34. Combination of These Ideas = Centre SIM(by J. Kuhnau, J. Eom, and M. Zekkos) • Build a network and facility information from 1997 to 2000 • Use business/establishment data • Build and verify zonal system and information therein • Expand Alam approach to the entire county • Identify major new developments and network changes in 2000 to 2020 • Provide a base model and validate it • No new data collection for Kuhnau – Eom and Zekkos modify routines using new data

  35. Simplified time of day activity-location-travel

  36. Zone Presence and Travel Demand Output for Time Segment 8:00 – 9:00 AM

  37. Zone Presence and Travel Demand Output for Time Segment 12:00 – 1:00 PM

  38. Zone Presence and Travel Demand Output for Time Segment 4:00 – 5:00 PM

  39. Zone Presence and Travel Demand Output for Time Segment 8:00 – 9:00 PM

  40. More recent with Goods Movements (V/C)(Jinki Eom MS)

  41. Many Models Like CentreSIM

  42. Model Review • Completed a review of 49 activity-based transportation models • Paradigms implemented (alone or in combination): • Cellular Automata (TRANSIMS) • Constraint-based (AMOS, BSP, CARLA, FAMOS, FEATHERS) • Computational Process Model (ALBATROSS, SCHEDULER, TASHA) • Data-statistical Distributions (DEMOS, MORPC, ORIENT, TASHA) • Econometric Utility-based (CEMDAP, PCATS, STARCHILD, TASHA) • Framework (SCHEDULER, SMART) • Hazards Risk (COMRADE) • Microsimulation (ALBATROSS, CEMDAP, FAMOS, TRANSIMS) • Operations Research (HAPP) • Psychometric Cognitive (SCHEDULER, GISICAS)

  43. Activity Model Behavioral Units

  44. Model Temporal and Spatial Resolutions

  45. Dynamic Planning Practice Evolving Paradigm of Modeling and Simulation New Research and Technology Sustainable and Green Visions

  46. Dynamic Planning Practice • Dynamic thinking = time and change are intrinsic in the thought processes underlying planning activities. • Strategic planning = set targets and find paths to achieve these targets • Ecological thinking = we consider the overall anthropogenic system and nature • Performance based planning = measurable targets and continuous evaluation • Coherent modeling = we need information and guidance to plan, design, operate, manage, and maintain transportation systems

  47. Dynamic Planning Components • Inventory – envision as a dynamic map of entities and functions • Strategy measurement and evaluation – targets and ways to make assessments • Forecasting and Backcasting – travel from present to future and back

  48. Inventory Issues • Multiple levels • Errors and error tolerance (policies, models, databases) • Updates and cycles • Merging data and information among different scales

  49. Strategy measurement and evaluation • Strategic Planning – set a target and the path to reach it – the usual vision, mission, goals, objectives, targets, measures, and update cycles • Performance Based Planning – in essence means if you meet a goal you get funding continuation; otherwise…

  50. A Federal Example • Federal Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) • For individual programs from homeland security to education, employment, and training. • Tailored analysis to each program (airport improvement, highway planning and construction, fixed guideway modernization capital investments, and the federal transit formula grants and research). • Yearly update and evaluation. • Uses 25 questions divided into sections to analyze: • a) purpose and design of a program; • b) strategic planning and an agency’s ability to define outcome-oriented yearly and longer term goals; • c) management and quality assurance; and • d) ability of a program to report accurately and consistently outcomes. • Tailored analysis yields summaries that receive a rating from 0 to 100 (0-49 is ineffective, 50-69 is adequate, 70-84 is moderately effective, and 84-100 is effective).

More Related