7,646 research outputs found

    Chapter 3 - Mobility on demand (MOD) and mobility as a service (MaaS): early understanding of shared mobility impacts and public transit partnerships

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    Technology is changing the way we move and reshaping cities and society. Shared and on-demand mobility represent notable transportation shifts in the 21st century. In recent years, mobility on demand (MOD)—where consumers access mobility, goods, and services on-demand by dispatching shared modes, courier services, public transport, and other innovative strategies—has grown rapidly due to technological advancements; changing consumer preferences; and a range of economic, environmental, and social factors. New attitudes toward sharing, MOD, and mobility as a service (MaaS) are changing traveler behavior and creating new opportunities and challenges for public transportation. This chapter discusses similarities and differences between the evolving concepts of MaaS and MOD. Next, it characterizes the range of existing public transit and MOD service models and enabling partnerships. The chapter also explores emerging trends impacting public transportation. While vehicle automation could result in greater public transit competition in the future, it could also foster new opportunities for transit enhancements (e.g., microtransit services, first- and last-mile connections, reduced operating costs). The chapter concludes with a discussion of how MOD/MaaS partnerships and automation could enable the public transit industry to reinvent itself, making it more attractive and competitive with private vehicle ownership and use

    Automated Microbial Metabolism Laboratory Final report

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    Photosynthesis activity during phosphate soil analysi

    Dyadic Risk and Foreign Direct Investment

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    Foreign direct investment (FDI) has been rigorously examined by scholars of international business. While recent studies have achieved a general consensus with regard to the political and economic determinants of FDI inflows and outflows, this paper sought to reconcile two disparate segments of the literature – regime type and political climate – based upon recently available events data. The study ultimately failed to establish support for its hypothesis that bilateral political ties can substantively mitigate political risk to investment in states with autocratic regimes, but demonstrates a necessity to look beyond country-level political risk factors and further examine those of the dyad in making foreign investment decisions

    Public Bikesharing in North America: Early Operator and User Understanding, MTI Report 11-19

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    This study evaluates public bikesharing in North America, reviewing the advances in technology and major events during its rapid expansion. We conducted 14 interviews with industry experts, public officials, and governmental agencies in the United States and Canada during summer 2011/spring 2012 and interviewed all 19 IT-based bikesharing organizations in the United States and Canada in spring 2012. Several bikesharing insurance experts were also consulted in spring 2012. Notable developments during this period include the emergence of a close partnership between vendor and operator and technological advances, such as mobile bike-docking stations that can be moved to different locations and real-time bike/station tracking to facilitate system rebalancing and provide user information
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