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Transportation and Network Analysis: Current Trends: Miscellanea in honor of Michael Florian /

Transportation and Network Analysis: Current Trends: Miscellanea in honor of Michael Florian /
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Field name Details
Dewey Class 658.40301
Title Transportation and Network Analysis: Current Trends ([EBook] :) : Miscellanea in honor of Michael Florian / / edited by Michel Gendreau, Patrice Marcotte.
Added Personal Name Gendreau, Michel editor.
Marcotte, Patrice editor.
Other name(s) SpringerLink (Online service)
Publication Boston, MA : : Springer US : : Imprint: Springer, , 2002.
Physical Details XX, 243 p. : online resource.
Series Applied Optimization 1384-6485 ; ; 63
ISBN 9781475768718
Summary Note MICHEL GENDREAU AND PATRICE MARCOTTE As an academic, Michael Florian has always stood at the forefront of transportation research. This is reflected in the miscellaneous contributions that make the chapters of this book, which are related in some way or another to Michael's interests in both the theoretical and practical aspects of his field. These interests span the areas of Traffic Assignment, Network Equilibrium, Shortest Paths, Railroad problems, De­ mand models, Variational Inequalities, Intelligent Transportation Systems, etc. The contributions are briefly outlined below. BASSANINI, LA BELLA AND NASTASI determine a track pricing policy for railroad companies through the solution of a generalized Nash game. BEN-AKIVA, BIER­ LAIRE, KOUTSOPOULOS AND MISHALANI discuss simulation-based estimators of the interactions between supply and demand within a real-time transportation system. BOYCE, BALASUBRAMANIAM AND TIAN analyze the impact of marginal cost pricing on urban traffic in the Chicago region. BROTCORNE, DE WOLF, GENDREAU AND LABBE present a discrete model of dynamic traffic assignment where flow departure is endogenous and the First-In-First-Out condition is strictly enforced. CASCETTA AND IMP ROTA give a rigorous treatment of the problem of estimating travel demand from observed data, both in the static and dynamic cases. CRAINIC, DUFOUR, FLo­ RIAN AND LARIN show how to obtain path information that is consistent with the link information provided by a nonlinear multimodal model. ERLANDER derives the logit model from an efficiency principle rather than from the classical random utility approach.:
Contents note 1 Allocation of railroad capacity under competition: a game theoretic approach to track time pricing -- 2 Real Time Simulation of Traffic demand-supply interactions within DynaMIT -- 3 Implications of Marginal Cost Road Pricing for Urban Travel Choices and User Benefits -- 4 A Dynamic User Equilibrium Model for Traffic Assignment in Urban Areas -- 5 Estimation of travel demand using traffic counts and other data sources -- 6 Path Recovery/Reconstruction and Applications in Nonlinear Multimodal Multicommodity Networks -- 7 Linear-in-parameters logit model derived from the Efficiency Principle -- 8 A Multi-Class Multi-Mode Variable Demand Network Equilibrium Model with Hierarchical Logit Structures -- 9 A Toll Pricing Framework for Traffic Assignment Problems with Elastic Demand -- 10 A Decision Support Methodology for Strategic Traffic Management -- 11 Column Generation Method for Network Design -- 12 Computing Fixed Points by Averaging -- 13 Pollution Permits for Spatial Price Networks -- 14 A new dual algorithm for shortest path reoptimization -- 15 Biproportional Matrix Balancing with Upper Bounds.
System details note Online access to this digital book is restricted to subscription institutions through IP address (only for SISSA internal users)
Internet Site http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-6871-8
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