scholarly journals Evaluation of motorized two-wheeler rider responses towards jaywalking pedestrians through mockup control studies for urban streets

Author(s):  
Pradhan Kumar Akinapalli ◽  
Digvijay S. Pawar ◽  
Hussein Dia
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 432-441
Author(s):  
Sabarish R ◽  
Dr.M. Prem Jeya Kumar
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Gulappa Devagappanavar ◽  
Pallavi Sarji Uthkarsh
Keyword(s):  

Dipterocarpus dyeri is a typical plant of tropical evergreen moist forest at Southeast Vietnam. These plants have been planted popularly at parks and urban streets for the shade and it has been commonly materials for timber industry. Multiplication of Dipterocarpus dyeri at nurseries could face to some diseases, such as the withered disease cause serial death. Our study isolated three disease fungi strains from the root areas of the diseased Dipterocarpus dyeri planted Ma Da nursery, Dong Nai province. Result of 28s rDNA sequencing showed these fungi belong to Ophiostoma eucalypticagena, Aspergillus nidulans and Collectotrichum gloeosporioides. This result is base for conducting the following studies to control the withered disease on Dipterocarpus dyeri at the nursery.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 375-379
Author(s):  
Rajesh Kumar ◽  
Paulomi M. Sudhir ◽  
Rajeev J. Michael ◽  
Manoj K. Sharma ◽  
Neelima Chakrabarty ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Gabriel Lefebvre-Ropars ◽  
Catherine Morency ◽  
Paula Negron-Poblete

The increasing popularity of street redesigns highlights the intense competition for street space between their different users. More and more cities around the world mention in their planning documents their intention to rebalance streets in favor of active transportation, transit, and green infrastructure. However, few efforts have managed to formalize quantifiable measurements of the balance between the different users and usages of the street. This paper proposes a method to assess the balance between the three fundamental dimensions of the street—the link, the place, and the environment—as well as a method to assess the adequation between supply and demand for the link dimension at the corridor level. A series of open and government georeferenced datasets were integrated to determine the detailed allocation of street space for 11 boroughs of the city of Montréal, Canada. Travel survey data from the 2013 Origine-Destination survey was used to model different demand profiles on these streets. The three dimensions of the street were found to be most unbalanced in the central boroughs of the city, which are also the most dense and touristic neighborhoods. A discrepancy between supply and demand for transit users and cyclists was also observed across the study area. This highlights the potential of using a distributive justice framework to approach the question of the fair distribution of street space in an urban context.


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