Author Archives: Joseph Chow

Mechanism for mobility operators to pool risk from disruptions

In this collaborative work with TU Delft, we invented a new insurance policy for mobility providers that allows them to borrow fleet resources from each other in the event of a major disruption. Using disruption data from transit operators in The Netherlands, we show how different sized operators carry different amounts of negotiating power in such risk pooling agreements, and how this depends on the underlying disruption risks. Should encourage more collaborative resiliency discussions between different mobility providers.

The research was funded by NSF CMMI-1634973 and CriticalMaaS no. 804469, as well as support from USDOT 69A3551747124 via the C2SMART Center.

Link to the paper: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/23249935.2023.2210229

C2SMART Center gets renewed by the USDOT for another 5 years

In the latest grant competition, 34 centers were awarded out of 230 applications submitted. Among those, 169 applications were for Tier 1 University Transportation Centers, of which only 20 were selected. The C2SMART Center (of which the BUILT Lab is belongs) was one of those.

In this renewal, the center is now “Connected Communities for Smart Mobility Toward Accessible and Resilient Transportation for Equitably Reducing Congestion” (C2SMARTER). New consortium members include CUNY NYCCT, NCAT, and Texas Southern U. The research priority has also shifted from Improving Mobility of People and Goods to Reducing Congestion. The funding amount is $2M per year, up to $10M over the next five years. Congrats to the team!

https://www.transportation.gov/utc/bil-centers-and-grantees

Procurement research for NYSDOT leads to successful award with ICF

NYSDOT solicited the help of Dr. Chow and the BUILT Lab at C2SMART in 2020 to conduct research in preparing first a Request for Information (RFI) and then an RFP. The goal of the RFP was to upgrade the current 511NYRideshare program into a next generation statewide program that would encompass more advanced technological capabilities and allow for emerging mobility options like micromobility, microtransit, carshare, mobility hubs, etc., making way for Mobility-as-a-Service.

Through the RFP process, NYSDOT successfully awarded a $29 million contract to global consulting and technology services provider ICF (NASDAQ: ICFI) to evolve this program. The press release for the award can be found on ICF’s page: https://www.icf.com/news/2023/02/new-york-state-awards-icf-29-million-transportation-contract.

New scenario data upscaling approach to manage transportation technology deployment portfolios

Whereas conventional transportation planning tends to be region-centric, we see a shift now to one that is more operator-centric, as transport providers work with different city and regional agencies. As such, understanding service impacts on different communities are more important than ever, particularly for emerging technologies. Microtransit/ridepooling is one such technology, and the limited observations (e.g. dozens) we have alone might not provide a robust statistical picture for understanding deployment needs across a landscape of different market typologies for thousands of cities. Our C2SMART Center study, in collaboration with Via, rectifies this by proposing the use of simulation-based “scenario data upscaling” (in much the same way algorithms can upscale images) to inform on metrics needed to estimate forecast models for managing deployment portfolios. Even with data from only a handful of cities, we were able to generate meaningful forecast models based on hundreds of synthesized scenarios, showing for microtransit deployment how to evaluate different service regions across a portfolio of different cities in the U.S. Should be of interest to federal policymakers, microtransit/ridepooling providers, and other emerging transportation technology providers and local agencies, particularly as we look to revamp the national tools and data we use for planning transport infrastructure.

Paper available here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0965856423000046

New reinforcement learning technology for emergency vehicle dispatch

With emergency vehicle response times increasing due to increasing congestion, there needs to be more technological solutions beyond using only sirens. We show how using reinforcement learning for route guidance integrated with signal control can reduce EMV response time by up to 43% in simulated scenarios over existing technologies. Should be of interest for discussion between traffic agencies (New York City Department of Transportation) and EMVs (New York City Fire Department, NYU Langone Health). Part of Haoran Su’s dissertation and in collaboration with Siemens. Funding from Siemens, Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation Fellowship, C2SMART University Transportation Center, NSFC Project 62103260, SJTU UM Joint Institute, J. Wu & J. Sun Endowment Fund, and the NYU University Research Challenge Fund 2020.

Paper can be found here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0968090X22003680

New machine-learning based mixed logit model for activity scheduling developed

Xiyuan Ren considered a ubiquitous data setting where we can fit choice models at the individual level (using inverse optimization-based machine learning), and showed how this can better capture joint travel choices within an activity scheduling context. We demonstrated this with data from Shanghai, where the agent level mixed logit model (fitted individual coefficients) outperforms state of the art dynamic discrete choice models. We also show that this can better integrate with optimization models to support choice-based system design. The work is now being applied to our C2SMART Center project in collaboration with Replica to estimate constrained mode choice models across population segments from their synthetic population data for New York State to design equitable statewide mobility services.

The research was funded by NSF CMMI-1652735 and the C2SMART Center (USDOT #69A3551747124).
Paper here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0191261522001862

Next-gen quay crane scheduling at container terminals

A new algorithm was developed to schedule both traditional and next-gen quay cranes at container terminals. It allows us to evaluate different levels of next gen quay crane investments for the Abu Dhabi Ports, which can reduce makespan by as much as 70% when all traditional cranes are replaced. Part of Omar Abou Kasm’s PhD dissertation work.

Paper: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0377221722008232

Dr. Chow joins the Top 2% of Scientists in Logistics & Transportation (career-wide)

In the September 2022 data-update for “Updated science-wide author databases of standardized citation indicators” by John Ioannidis (Stanford), career-long data are updated to end-of-2021 and single recent year data pertain to citations received during calendar year 2021. The selection is based on the top 100,000 scientists by c-score (with and without self-citations) or a percentile rank of 2% or above in the sub-field. In the “Logistics & Transportation” subfield across all years, Dr. Chow is now ranked 376th in citations as of the 2021 citation data, within the top 2% of the 19,216 scientists listed with this subfield as their primary field.

The original data can be accessed here: https://elsevier.digitalcommonsdata.com/datasets/btchxktzyw/4
The extracted top 2% list can be found here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1FFatMl_ZjG8jC-rFDLuRl0VpVpdzeBzD-hZrrt_pv_M/edit?usp=sharing

Eight papers accepted for presentation at TRB 2023

BUILT@NYU had eight papers accepted for presentation at the upcoming TRB Annual Meeting in Washington DC in January 2023. The papers represent topics including public transport, reinforcement learning, service region design, discrete choice modeling, last mile deliveries, electric vehicles, zone districting, network design, and Mobility-as-a-Service ecosystems.