Roadway Safety Data Interoperability Between Local and State Agencies

Roadway Safety Data Interoperability Between Local and State Agencies
Author: Nancy Lefler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2014
Genre: Electronic data interchange
ISBN:

"TRB's National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Synthesis 458, Roadway Safety Data Interoperability Between Local and State Agencies provides an overview of the state of the practice regarding the interoperability between state and local safety data. The report also highlights agency practices that support a data-driven safety program on all public roads"--Publisher's description.

Traffic Data Collection and Analysis

Traffic Data Collection and Analysis
Author: Alexander French
Publisher: Transportation Research Board National Research
Total Pages: 68
Release: 1986
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN:

This synthesis will be of interest to traffic engineers, highway planners, and others concerned with the collection of traffic data for traffic engineering studies, for long-range planning, and for evaluation of traffic law enforcement. Information is presented on current practice in traffic data collection and analysis. Although types of highway traffic data collected over the past 50 years have not changed significantly, the quantities, analysis procedure, and presentations of these data have changed as a result of changing policies, operational concerns, and capabilities resulting from new technologies. This report of the Transportation Research Board describes the technology (both hardware and software) that is being used for traffic data collection, and discusses technological advances that have not yet been applied to the acquisition and presentation of traffic data.

Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization

Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization
Author: Jaume Barceló
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2010-07-20
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1441960708

A nice night of October 2007, in Beijing, during the XV World Conference on ITS a number of colleagues met informally for a dinner party that spontaneously became a vivid discussion on the importance of traffic data for all types of p- poses. Researchers can hardly do any progress in modeling, developing, and te- ing theories without suitable data, and what practitioners can do in real life is limited not only by technology but also by the availability of the required data. Quite frequently, the data and not the technologies are what determine how far we can go. Any discussion about traffic data leads in a natural way to a discussion on the variety of traffic data sources, formats, levels of aggregation, accuracies, and so on. Consequently, we moved to talk on the initiative that Kuwahara had undertaken in his traffic laboratory at the University of Tokyo, known as the International Traffic Data Base, and thus smoothly but inexorably we came to agree that it would be convenient to organize a workshop to continue our discussion at a more formal level, share our points of view with other colleagues, listen what they had to say and, if possible, d- seminate the findings in our professional and academic communities.

Traffic Monitoring Guide

Traffic Monitoring Guide
Author: United States. Federal Highway Administration. Office of Highway Information Management
Publisher:
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1992
Genre: Traffic congestion
ISBN:

California

California
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 130
Release: 2002
Genre: Freight and freightage
ISBN: