A. James Clark School of Engineering
Permanent URI for this communityhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/1654
The collections in this community comprise faculty research works, as well as graduate theses and dissertations.
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Item DEVELOPMENT OF A RESEARCH-BASED SHORT MESSAGE CREATION TOOL FOR WILDFIRE EMERGENCIES(2019) Doermann, Jessica Leigh; Milke, James; Fire Protection Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)Wireless Emergency Alerts are short message alerts that authorities can send to devices in specific geographical regions during times of imminent threat. These messages give authorities the ability to distribute important information in a timely manner to those who need it most. The majority of research regarding best practices for creating short message alerts is vague and requires interpretation before implementation. This thesis reviews and analyzes research and evidence-based guidance currently available to those creating short message alerts. Using the research, evidence-based guidance, and subsequent analysis, fifteen user prompts were developed and implemented to build a message creation tool that generates wildfire evacuation messages. The result of using the tool is a wildfire-based evacuation message that auto-incorporates the research and guidance currently available. This thesis helps develop a foundation for the bridge between short message alert research and the practical generation of messages during imminent threat emergencies.Item On agent-based modeling: Multidimensional travel behavioral theory, procedural models and simulation-based applications(2015) Xiong, Chenfeng; Zhang, Lei; Civil Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)This dissertation proposes a theoretical framework to modeling multidimensional travel behavior based on artificially intelligent agents, search theory, procedural (dynamic) models, and bounded rationality. For decades, despite the number of heuristic explanations for different results, the fact that "almost no mathematical theory exists which explains the results of the simulations" remains as one of the large drawbacks of agent-based computational process approach. This is partly the side effect of its special feature that "no analytical functions are required". Among the rapidly growing literature devoted to the departure from rational behavior assumptions, this dissertation makes effort to embed a sound theoretical foundation for computational process approach and agent-based microsimulations for transportation system modeling and analyses. The theoretical contribution is three-fold: (1) It theorizes multidimensional knowledge updating, search start/stopping criteria, and search/decision heuristics. These components are formulated or empirically modeled and integrated in a unified and coherent approach. (2) Procedural and dynamic agent-based decision-making is modeled. Within the model, agents make decisions. They also make decisions on how and when to make those decisions. (3) Replace conventional user equilibrium with a dynamic behavioral user equilibrium (BUE). Search start/stop criteria is defined in the way that the modeling process should eventually lead to a steady state that is structurally different to user equilibrium (UE) or dynamic user equilibrium (DUE). The theory is supported by empirical observations and the derived quantitative models are tested by agent-based simulation on a demonstration network. The model in its current form incorporates short-term behavioral dimensions: travel mode, departure time, pre-trip routing, and en-route diversion. Based on research needs and data availability, other dimensions can be added to the framework. The proposed model is successfully integrated with a dynamic traffic simulator (i.e. DTALite, a light-weight dynamic traffic assignment and simulation engine) and then applied to a mid-size study area in White Flint, Maryland. Results obtained from the integration corroborate the behavioral richness, computational efficiency, and convergence property of the proposed theoretical framework. The model is then applied to a number of applications in transportation planning, operations, and optimization, which highlights the capabilities of the proposed theory in estimating rich behavioral dynamics and the potential of large-scale implementation. Future research should experiment the integration with activity-based models, land-use development, energy consumption estimators, etc. to fully develop the potential of the agent-based model.Item ALL ABOUT CONGESTION: MODELING DEPARTURE TIME DYNAMICS AND ITS INTEGRATION WITH TRAFFIC MODELS(2011) Xiong, Chenfeng; Zhang, Lei; Civil Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)This thesis comprehensively studies departure time choice models, and analyzes the consequent system-level peak spreading effects. In modeling, the school of discrete choice models successfully reveals the user heterogeneity. A mixture logit model and a latent class model based on the notion of carpooling preference have been estimated. Then a novel positive approach has been developed, which avoids the assumptions of rationality and focuses on how individuals actually make departure time decisions. Following this positive theory, we specify Bayesian learning, empirically estimate search start and stopping conditions that vary among users, and empirically derive search and decision rules from a joint reveal/stated-preference survey dataset. This innovative behavioral model is integrated with a traffic simulation model for a real-world study. Findings from this application reveal the potential of the proposed model to capture network dynamics and behavioral reactions. This integrated framework also provides a valuable tool for the evaluation of new transportation infrastructures, policies, and operation strategies.