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CALL FOR PAPERS 
Innovations in Freight Demand Modeling and Data
A Transportation Research Board SHRP 2 Symposium

September 14-15, 2010, Crowne Plaza Hotel-Dulles Airport, Washington,
D.C. 

Organized by the Transportation Research Board of the National
Academies, Second Strategic Highway Research Program

This symposium is intended to unearth effective freight demand models
that are supported by robust theory, well-developed computational
methods, freight-data sources, and practical visualization techniques
for communicating results. The participants will examine, evaluate, and
promote innovative and promising advances in freight demand modeling,
data collection, and freight-forecasting research methods. This is an
integral part of the SHRP 2 project C20, which is fostering fresh ideas
and new approaches in freight demand modeling and associated data.
 
Freight traffic has been growing at a rate faster than passenger
traffic. Freight bottlenecks are evident in all modes of transportation
and have international implications. Freight has become a major issue
for state and metropolitan transportation planners because freight
forecasting models lag behind travel demand models. Understanding and
being able to forecast freight traffic is a critical input to planning
for future highway capacity. The ability to forecast freight traffic is
understood to be in a primitive and fragmented state.

Freight demand modeling is more dynamic and heterogeneous than passenger
demand modeling. There is considerable and complex interaction between
international and domestic flows, public and private interests, and
logistics behavior. New forecasting and data-collection approaches are
needed to capture the variety in public policy, shifting economic
geographies, independent multimodal options, business issues, carriers,
shippers, commodities, and receivers that exist in the freight world.

The symposium is also a competition, in that selected models and
research will be presented and discussed. The models presented will be
judged on a variety of dimensions, such as methodology, practicality,
ease of use, clarity of purpose, research value, and results.  A panel
of experts-representing transportation modes, public and private
sectors, geographies (international and domestic), technology, and
analytical techniques-will judge the competition.

The winner will receive a prize of $1,000.

In addition, one of the primary outcomes of the conference is to design
an ongoing and recurring competitive "Freight Demand Modeling Innovation
Program" to further the science of freight demand modeling and
forecasting. During the course of the symposium, participants will be
asked to provide input and feedback to assist in designing such a
program, including identifying priority research recommendations. This
will further the research work from previous conferences regarding
freight modeling and data improvements.

Planners and modeling practitioners are encouraged to submit short
papers (3-5 pages) on a wide range of topics related to freight demand
modeling by July 15, 2010, to [log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> . 

The authors will be notified regarding the selection of their abstracts
by July 30, 2010. If selected, a formal paper will not be required, only
a presentation (PowerPoint or presentation outline) will be due by
August 30, 2010, followed by full presentation at the conference. 

Topics include, but are not limited to:

Models & Forecasting

*   Commodity Flow/Goods Movement/Classifications
*   Logistics and Supply Chains
*   Geographic Level

o   Regional /Metropolitan
o   Statewide
o   Urban
o   Rural

*   Temporal & Seasonal Variations
*   Modal Selection/Diversions


Data Collection, Quality, and Validation

*   Counts and Conversions
*   Public and Private Sources
*   Applications and Tools
*   Variations in Geographic Needs
*   Origin-Destination Methodologies
*   Continuous, Real-Time Data 
*   Data Sampling Techniques
*   Commodity versus Vehicle/Container Data


Energy & Environment

*   Fuel Consumption & Energy
*   Investment Strategies
*   Pinch-Point/Congestion Mitigation
*   Land Use Impacts-Local and Metropolitan


Freight Economics

*   Benefit-Cost and Return-on-Investment Analysis
*   Global Trade Forecasting 
*   Microsimulation and Econometric Model Use
*   Freight-Logistics Decision Process


Private-Public Collaboration

*   Application of Technology
*   Data Sharing
*   Finance and Funding Models
*   Location/Choice Development
*   Multicriteria Decision Making
*   Project Development


Transportation Program Development

*   Program Evaluation
*   Project Identification 
*   Investment Analysis and Benefit/Cost
*   Asset Management
*   Decision-Analysis Frameworks
*   Applied Performance Measures

 

 

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LL_FOR_PAPERS_on_Innovations_in_Freight_Demand_Modeling_and_Data_413.asp
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