default search action
Public Transport - Planning and Operations, Volume 9
Volume 9, Numbers 1-2, July 2017
- Stefan Voß:
Leo G. Kroon (1958-2016). 1-2 - Marie Schmidt, Stefan Voß:
Advanced systems in public transport. 3-6 - Philine Gattermann, Jonas Harbering, Anita Schöbel:
Line pool generation. 7-32 - Alicia De-Los-Santos, Gilbert Laporte, Juan A. Mesa, Federico Perea:
The railway line frequency and size setting problem. 33-53 - Maarten L. Trap, Dennis Huisman, Rob M. P. Goverde:
Assessment of alternative line plans for severe winter conditions in the Netherlands. 55-71 - Gábor Maróti:
A branch-and-bound approach for robust railway timetabling. 73-94 - Andreas Bärmann, Alexander Martin, Oskar Schneider:
A comparison of performance metrics for balancing the power consumption of trains in a railway network by slight timetable adaptation. 95-113 - Ralf Borndörfer, Heide Hoppmann, Marika Karbstein:
Passenger routing for periodic timetable optimization. 115-135 - Zhiyuan Lin, Eva Barrena, Raymond S. K. Kwan:
Train unit scheduling guided by historic capacity provisions and passenger count surveys. 137-154 - Marcel E. van Kooten Niekerk, J. M. van den Akker, J. A. Hoogeveen:
Scheduling electric vehicles. 155-176 - Ralf Borndörfer, Christof Schulz, Stephan Seidl, Steffen Weider:
Integration of duty scheduling and rostering to increase driver satisfaction. 177-191 - Hilbert Snijders, Ricardo L. Saldanha:
Decision support for scheduling security crews at Netherlands Railways. 193-215 - Marcus Posada, Henrik Andersson, Carl H. Häll:
The integrated dial-a-ride problem with timetabled fixed route service. 217-241 - Jörn Schönberger:
Scheduling constraints in dial-a-ride problems with transfers: a metaheuristic approach incorporating a cross-route scheduling procedure with postponement opportunities. 243-272 - Ramon M. Lentink, Dick Middelkoop, Douwe de Vries:
A comparison of different configurations of a Centrally Guided Train Operation System in Dutch Railway Operations. 273-284 - Gabriel E. Sánchez-Martínez, Nigel H. M. Wilson, Haris N. Koutsopoulos:
Schedule-free high-frequency transit operations. 285-305 - Ralf Rückert, Martin Lemnian, Christoph Blendinger, Steffen Rechner, Matthias Müller-Hannemann:
PANDA: a software tool for improved train dispatching with focus on passenger flows. 307-324 - Thijs Verhaegh, Dennis Huisman, Pieter-Jan Fioole, Juan C. Vera:
A heuristic for real-time crew rescheduling during small disruptions. 325-342 - Nadjla Ghaemi, Oded Cats, Rob M. P. Goverde:
Railway disruption management challenges and possible solution directions. 343-364 - Ralf Borndörfer, Boris Grimm, Markus Reuther, Thomas Schlechte:
Template-based re-optimization of rolling stock rotations. 365-383 - Jesper Bláfoss Ingvardson, Jonas Kornerup Jensen, Otto Anker Nielsen:
Analysing improvements to on-street public transport systems: a mesoscopic model approach. 385-409 - Siva Srikukenthiran, Amer Shalaby:
Enabling large-scale transit microsimulation for disruption response support using the Nexus platform. 411-435 - Cecilia Viggiano, Haris N. Koutsopoulos, Nigel H. M. Wilson, John P. Attanucci:
Journey-based characterization of multi-modal public transportation networks. 437-461 - Andisheh Ranjbari, Yi-Chang Chiu, Mark D. Hickman:
Exploring factors affecting demand for possible future intercity transit options. 463-481
Volume 9, Number 3, October 2017
- Yizhou Zhang, Erik Jenelius, Karl Kottenhoff:
Impact of real-time crowding information: a Stockholm metro pilot study. 483-499 - Yingying Xing, Jian Lu, Shengdi Chen, Sunanda Dissanayake:
Vulnerability analysis of urban rail transit based on complex network theory: a case study of Shanghai Metro. 501-525 - Umberto Petruccelli, Salvatore Carleo:
Cost models for local road transit. 527-548 - Padma Seetharaman:
Modelling risk aversion using a disaggregate stochastic process model in congested transit networks. 549-569 - Saeed Asadi Bagloee, Majid Sarvi, Avishai Ceder:
Transit priority lanes in the congested road networks. 571-599
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.