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IWCTS 2011


4th ACM SIGSPATIAL International Workshop on Computational Transportation Science

November 1, 2011, Chicago, IL, USA

Held in conjunction with the

19th ACM SIGSPATIAL International Conference on
Advances in Geographic Information Systems (ACM SIGSPATIAL GIS 2011) November 1-4 2011 - Chicago, IL
.
http://www.ctscience.org



SPONSOR

MODAP is the sponsor of IWCTS 2011.


NEWS: Accepted Paper Titles are available online

NEWS: Technical Programme are available online



CALL FOR PAPERS

The 4th International Workshop on Computational Transportation Science intends to bring together communities interested in the computation, knowledge discovery and technology policy aspects of surface transportation systems. The organizers of IWCTS welcomes papers from researchers in computer science, urban and regional planning, civil engineering, geography and geoinformatics, and related disciplines to submit papers for consideration for presentation and discussion at the one-day workshop (on November 1, 2011) and for publication in the conference proceedings.

BACKGROUND

Transportation is a vast sector, involving vehicles, infrastructure and travelers with complex and dynamic environment. The proliferation of sensors and wireless communication amongst these entities provides opportunities for transportation services that address changing mobility needs in efficient and equitable ways. For instance, the automobile has evolved from being a basic transportation device into an advanced system with myriad on-board computational technologies that address needs ranging from automated crash avoidance to wellness. Traveler information concepts have evolved from messages relayed from roadside message signs and factory-installed in-vehicle navigation devices to navigation and wayfinding via hand-held devices connecting travel activity patterns, social networks and multiple modes of transportation. Transportation infrastructure itself has evolved from concrete and asphalt and isolated traffic control to complex sensor systems that are able to detect and generate massive amounts of data in real-time.

These trends rest on top of rapid urbanization and formation of mega metro regions, changing demographics and rapidly aging societies, globalization of trade and generation of complex freight transportation and supply chains, and significant changes anticipated in the domains of energy and climate change. These broader trends have profound implications for transportation systems of the future and have already led to the instrumentation and interconnectedness of many complex systems within their own domains. Transportation systems should be able to address these changes and respond in efficient and cost-effective manner.

These trends generate significant research questions relating to computation, knowledge discovery and technology policy. Transportation systems, due to their distributed/mobile nature, can become the ultimate test-bed for a ubiquitous (i.e., embedded, highly-distributed, and sensor-laden) computing environment of unprecedented scale. Information technology is the foundation for implementing new strategies, particularly if they are to be made available in real-time to wireless devices such as cell phones and PDAs. A related development is the emergence of increasingly more sophisticated geospatial and spatio-temporal information management capabilities. Human factors, technology adoption and use, and user feedback and user-centered design are areas of technology policy central to the success of this ubiquitous computing environment.

The emerging discipline of Computational Transportation Science (CTS) combines computer science and engineering with the modeling, planning, and economic aspects of transportation planning and engineering to leverage developments in the above domains. The discipline goes beyond vehicular technology, and addresses pedestrian or bicycle systems on hand-held devices, non-real-time issues such as data mining, as well as data management issues above the networking layer. By taking advantage of ubiquitous computing, CTS applications can help create more efficient, equitable, livable and sustainable transportation systems and communities.


ACCEPTED PAPERS

FULL PAPER

  • Time of Arrival Predictability Horizons for Public Bus Routes, Cathal Coffey;Alexei Pozdnoukhov;Francesco Calabrese
  • Travel Time Prediction Using Machine Learning “eone Pereira Masiero;Marco Antonio Casanova;Marcelo Tilio M. de Carvalho
  • Spatio-Temporal Effects of Bus Arrival Time Information, Piyushimita Thakuriah (Vonu);Lei Tang;William Vassilakis
  • A Survey on Trust Management for ITS, Shuo Ma;Ouri Wolfson;Jie Lin
  • Crowd-Sourced Carpool Recommendation Based on Simple and Efficient Trajectory Grouping, DongWoo Lee;Steve H.L. Liang
  • Proximity Queries in Time-dependent Traffic Networks Using Graph Embeddings, Hans-Peter Kriegel; Peer Kröger; Matthias Renz, Fabian D. Winter
  • Efficient Data Management in Support of Shortest-Path Computation, Alexandros Efentakis; Dieter Pfoser; Agnès Voisard
  • Quantifying the Exact Impact of State Estimation Error on Traffic Signal Control , Chen Cai; Yang Wang; D. Glenn Geers

    SHORT PAPER

  • Crowdmap and Ushahidi: to obtain and visualize traffic congestion information in Mexico City Karla Ivon López Guillén; Uriel Flores Mendoza; Larissa Welti Santos


    SCOPE OF THE SUBMISSION

    The International Workshop on Computational Transportation Science invites submissions of original, previously unpublished papers on CTS issues. Position papers that report novel research directions or identify challenging problems are also invited. Papers incorporating one or more of the following themes are especially encouraged:

  • Uncertain information distributed among moving travelers/vehicles and the infrastructure
  • Travel information for pedestrian, biking, and other non-motorized applications
  • Social networks, social media applications in travel
  • Computation of costs of multi-modal travelling
  • Information regarding transfers to alternate modes of transportation
  • Data mining and statistical learning for travel information
  • Dynamic shortest path computations using forecasts
  • Human-computer interfaces in intelligent transportation applications
  • Privacy and security in transportation information
  • Social and institutional information related to travel
  • Real-time negotiation among travelers
  • Novel applications targeted to health, mobility and wellness
  • Novel applications targeted to livability and sustainability
  • Crowdsourcing and participatory sensing including urban sensing and volunteered GIS
  • Mobile artificial-intelligence aspects related to transportation
  • Sensor information related to transportation
  • Wireless communication with travelers and vehicles
  • Human factors, adaptive driving, crash-related research
  • Technology adoption, use, travel behavior impacts
  • User feedback (eco-feedback), user-centered design, persuasive technology in transportation
  • Collaborative filtering and recommender systems for daily travel
  • Design and implementation research relating to assistive technologies


    SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

    Authors should prepare an Adobe Acrobat PDF version of their full paper. Papers must be in English and not exceed 6 pages double column in ACM SIG format (US Letter size, 8.5 x 11 inches) including text, figures and references. Position papers are limited 4 pages. Each submission should start with: the title, abstract, and names, contact information of authors, type of the submission (research paper or position paper). Authors are asked to register the titles and abstract of their papers in advance. To submit a paper, please visit https://cmt2.research.microsoft.com/IWCTS2011. Accepted papers will be published in the ACM digital library. Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their paper will be presented at the workshop.

    IMPORTANT DATES

  • Paper submissions due: August 10, 2011 August 17, 2011
  • Notification to the authors: September 2, 2011
  • Camera ready papers due: September 9, 2011
  • ACM GIS 2011 Conference: November 1-4, 2011
  • IWCTS Workshop: November 1, 2011


    REGISTRATION

    Registration for the IWCTS2011 will be handled through ACMGIS2011. Please visit the conference site to register, and for additional information on nearby accommodation.

    General Chair

    Piyushimita (Vonu) Thakuriah, University of Illinois at Chicago

    Program Committee Chair:

    Glenn Geers, NICTA & University of New South Wales, Australia

    Publicity Chair

    Steve Liang, University of Calgary, Canada

    Steering Committee

    Ouri Wolfson, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
    Bhaduri Budhendra, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee, USA

    Program Committee Members

    Stephan Winter, University of Melbourne, Australia
    Ben Heydecker, University College London, UK
    Shashi Shekhar, University of Minnesota, USA
    Bart Kuijpers, Hasselt University, Belgium
    Monika Sester, University of Hannver, Germany
    Chris Skinner, DISplay Pty. Ltd. and the University of Sydney, Australia
    Chen Cai, NICTA and the University of New South Wales, Australia
    Harvey Miller, University of Utah, USA
    Sabine Timpf, University of Augsberg, Germany
    Claus Brenner, University of Hanover, Germany
    Jochen Albrecht, Hunter College, City University of New York, USA
    Hani Mahmassani, Northwestern University, USA
    Patrick Laube, University of Zurich, Switzerland
    Alex Bayen, University of California at Berkeley, USA
    Goce Trajcevski, Northwestern University, USA
    Raja Sengupta, University of California, Berkeley
    Barak Fishbain, University of Southern California