Increasing Transparency and Feasibility of Auto Accessibility for Project Prioritization

Author(s):  
Richard A. Boateng ◽  
John S. Miller

Accessibility, the number of time-decayed jobs available to each zone within a region, can help prioritize candidate transportation investments. This paper demonstrates how to compute auto accessibility using commonly available resources and identifies strategies needed to render calculations feasible and transparent. (The scope excludes transit and pedestrian impacts.) For the first objective, computational solutions included developing a semi-automated method to import legacy transportation networks, automating turn prohibitions, and using an algorithm to check for inconsistently formed service areas that sometimes occur in a random fashion with geographic information system software. Failure to exercise quality control using these approaches gives erroneous results: not solving the problem of inconsistently formed service areas led to a region within 50 mi of a 1-mi corridor (where improvements are proposed) having an accessibility almost 40 times higher than the correct value. For the second objective, the influence area (i.e., catchment radius) mattered most: for one project, the forecast accessibility improvement dropped by 80% when an area within 45 mi of the project, rather than an area within 15 mi, was the basis of the analysis. Other decisions affected forecast accessibility improvement less: the choice of the number of centroid connectors affected forecasts by an average of 23% (with a 10-mi influence area). Choosing to eliminate negative net accessibility contributions, attributed to geometric approximations in the software, affected forecasts by less than 21% (35-mi influence area or smaller). Ranking five proposed investments in relation to their forecast accessibility benefit demonstrated the importance of documenting users’ computational choices.

1991 ◽  
pp. 161-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Antenucci ◽  
Kay Brown ◽  
Peter L. Croswell ◽  
Michael J. Kevany ◽  
Hugh Archer

Eos ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Linzmeier ◽  
K. Kitajima ◽  
A. Denny ◽  
J. Cammack

Geographic information system software, created for mapping cities and continents, works equally well with the minuscule layers and inclusions that record a crystal's history.


2015 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 225-239 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katarzyna Lisek ◽  
Kamil Nieścioruk

Abstract The paper deals with the application of Geographic Information System software in cartographic data presentation in the field of historical data mining. Lists of soldiers buried in the I world war cemeteries near Jasło were used. The prepared database helped to create series of maps, mainly diagram maps, that serve as a useful statistical and demographic characteristics of the phenomena. The authors stressed advantages of the solution used and the usefulness of historical data in spatial database preparation process. The shortages of the GIS software itself were also pointed out, especially as long as cartographic editing and methodology principles are concerned.


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