1,357 research outputs found

    Digital Dissemination Platform of Transportation Engineering Education Materials Founded in Adoption Research

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 14.0

    Knowledge Transfer Needs and Methods

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 12.3

    Naturally Occurring Asbestos in Alaska and Experiences and Policy of Other States Regarding its Use

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 09.0

    Evaluation of Risk in Change Orders Report for AKDOT Construction Staff

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 11.0

    Selection of Preservatives for Marine Structural Timbers in Herring Spawning Areas

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 12.2

    Serving Future Transportation Needs: Succession Planning for a State Department of Transportation Organization, Its People & Mission

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 12.0

    Enabling Data-Driven Transportation Safety Improvements in Rural Alaska

    Get PDF
    Safety improvements require funding. A clear need must be demonstrated to secure funding. For transportation safety, data, especially data about past crashes, is the usual method of demonstrating need. However, in rural locations, such data is often not available, or is not in a form amenable to use in funding applications. This research aids rural entities, often federally recognized tribes and small villages acquire data needed for funding applications. Two aspects of work product are the development of a traffic counting application for an iPad or similar device, and a review of the data requirements of the major transportation funding agencies. The traffic-counting app, UAF Traffic, demonstrated its ability to count traffic and turning movements for cars and trucks, as well as ATVs, snow machines, pedestrians, bicycles, and dog sleds. The review of the major agencies demonstrated that all the likely funders would accept qualitative data and Road Safety Audits. However, quantitative data, if it was available, was helpful

    Construction Dust Amelioration Techniques

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 12.0

    Invasion Triangle: An Organizational Framework for Species Invasion

    Get PDF
    Species invasion is a complex, multifactor process. To encapsulate this complexity into an intuitively appealing, simple, and straightforward manner, we present an organizational framework in the form of an invasion triangle. The invasion triangle is an adaptation of the disease triangle used by plant pathologists to help envision and evaluate interactions among a host, a pathogen, and an environment. Our modification of this framework for invasive species incorporates the major processes that result in invasion as the three sides of the triangle: (1) attributes of the potential invader; (2) biotic characteristics of a potentially invaded site; and (3) environmental conditions of the site. The invasion triangle also includes the impact of external influences on each side of the triangle, such as climate and land use change. This paper introduces the invasion triangle, discusses how accepted invasion hypotheses are integrated in this framework, describes how the invasion triangle can be used to focus research and management, and provides examples of application. The framework provided by the invasion triangle is easy to use by both researchers and managers and also applicable at any level of data intensity, from expert opinion to highly controlled experiments. The organizational framework provided by the invasion triangle is beneficial for understanding and predicting why species are invasive in specific environments, for identifying knowledge gaps, for facilitating communication, and for directing management in regard to invasive species
    corecore