RT30 – Amer Shalaby - Research Innovations in Delay and Disruption Management

EPISODE · Aug 8, 2021 · 40 MIN

RT30 – Amer Shalaby - Research Innovations in Delay and Disruption Management

from Researching Transit · host Public Transport Research Group

This is the eighth episode in Researching Transit's Handbook of Public Transport Research Series. Links to the book can be found at the end of the notes. In this episode, Professor Graham Currie speaks to Amer Shalaby, Professor and Bahen/Tanenbaum Chair in the Department of Civil & Mineral Engineering, University of Toronto, Canada. Shalaby’s passion for all aspects of public transport, from operations and planning to emerging technologies and data, has led him to his role as Director of the new Transit Analytics Lab (TAL) and Co-Director of the Center for Automated and Transformative Transportation Systems (CATTS) at the University of Toronto. TAL provides a unique forum for different transit stakeholders to come together to better leverage transit data. The lab uses predictive analytics and optimisation to solve problems relating to service planning, operational management, customer satisfaction, equity and more, in collaboration with its industry partners. Professor Shalaby has co-authored two chapters in the Handbook of Public Transport Research: Chapter 16: Transit Signal Priority: research and practice review and future needs; and Chapter 14: Rail transit disruption management: a comprehensive review of strategies and approaches. Chapter 16 of the handbook is written for academics and professionals grappling with transit reliability in the face of many sources of delay. Its focus is on one of the key strategies for reducing transit delay: traffic signal priority (TSP). The evolution and technology behind traditional and adaptive signal priority are explored. Key lessons learned include the importance of carefully planning stop and signal location at intersections, and coordinating successive TSP intersections. Sticking to the theme of disruption management, Chapter 14 takes a broad look at the variety of strategies that are available to address rail transit delay. Rail user delays in the New York subway cost the equivalent of $389 million per year. The chapter reviews the strategies available to mitigate these disruptions and their costly implications. The chapter takes a deep dive into ‘bus bridging’ or substitute bus services, a key strategy to address rail service disruption. Other strategies are grouped into supply-side or demand-side responses. Supply-side strategies relate to schedule adjustment, whereas the less common demand-side responses use information provision and crowd management. Find out more about this research in Chapters 14 and 16 of the Handbook of Public Transport Research, available for purchase from the publisher’s website: https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/gbp/handbook-of-public-transport-research-9781788978651.html. Find out more about Professor Amer Shalaby and his work: https://uttri.utoronto.ca/people/amer-shalaby/ Transit Analytics Lab (TAL), University of Toronto: https://uttri.utoronto.ca/research/research-groups/transit-analytics-lab-tal/ Center for Automated and Transformative Transportation Systems (CATTS): https://uttri.utoronto.ca/catts/ Have feedback? Find us on twitter and Instagram @transitpodcast or using #researchingtransit Music from this episode is from https://www.purple-planet.com

NOW PLAYING

RT30 – Amer Shalaby - Research Innovations in Delay and Disruption Management

0:00 40:38

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Thriving Mom Tribe | Practical Health Solutions for Moms Lindsay Rattay, Nutritional Therapy Practitioner The Go-To Podcast for all Moms who want to have a Thriving home. Do you struggle to find the balance between holistic health and living in the world?Are you tired of trying every diet yourself and still not feeling good?Do you find yourself researching for hours how to find the best remedy for your child’s sickness but end up feeling defeated?You want to be metabolically healthy but don’t know where to start?Do you wish you could feel confident in how you feed your family during the week knowing that you have to eat out because life is busy?You just enjoy going to a restaurant and don’t want to feel guilty about it?Do you want a cookie and a healthy salad?I am Lindsay Rattay, I am so excited that you are here on the Thriving Mom Tribe Podcast. I remember being the mom who researched everything from nutrition to exercise. To feeling tired and depressed. Trying to find the balance of wanting more holistic options for my family while still raising busy kids. But I discovered easy For the Living and the Dead. Traces of the Holocaust EHRI In each episode of For the Living and the Dead, a Holocaust researcher talks about an object, now often in a museum, that tells a very personal story about the Holocaust. The first season of the EHRI Podcast has six episodes and features a teddy bear, mica-flakes, a postcard, gramophone discs, a magazine cover and the typewriter. The unique stories come from all over Europe – the Holocaust being a continent-wide phenomenon – ranging from Belgium to Ukraine, from Romania to Italy.This podcast season of six episodes is released every other week, starting 29 September 2022. In 2023, another season will follow.Music accreditation: Blue Dot Sessions, https://app.sessions.blue/ Tracks - Opening and closing: Stillness. Incidental, Gathering Stasis, Pencil Marks, Uncertain Ground, Marble Transit and Snowmelt. License Creative Commons Atttribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (BB BY-NC 4.0). Ecosystemic Futures Dyan Finkhousen: CEO of Shoshin Works Ecosystemic Futures engages with the world’s elite thought leaders who are researching and leading meaningful development in areas that could impact society in the next half century. Provided by Shoshin Works in collaboration with NASA Convergent Aeronautics Solutions Project - Ecosystemic Futures explores technological advances and structural patterns that will help us better innovate, operate, and navigate in our increasingly connected world. Join the conversation as NASA leaders, and industry and policy luminaries share their perspectives with host Dyan Finkhousen, a leading strategist and global authority on ecosystemic solutions, and brilliant co-hosts. Techlore Talks Techlore Techlore Talks brings you in-depth conversations with the experts at the forefront of privacy, security, and digital rights. Hosted by Henry Fisher, founder of Techlore and long-time digital rights educator, each episode features meaningful discussions with the people building, researching, and advocating for digital freedom. From cybersecurity researchers and privacy tool developers to open-source advocates and digital rights activists—if they're shaping how we protect ourselves online, they're on this show.Topics include:• Privacy tools and technologies• Cybersecurity threats and defenses• Open-source software and development• Surveillance and digital rights• Encryption and data protection• Tech policy and advocacy• Digital sovereignty and freedomJust real conversations with real experts. New episodes released regularly. Subscribe now and join the community fighting for digital freedom.<p style='color:grey;
URL copied to clipboard!