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Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2004. Geographic Information Systems Applications in Transit. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/23342.
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Suggested Citation:"REFERENCES." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2004. Geographic Information Systems Applications in Transit. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/23342.
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44 REFERENCES 1. Coppock, J.T. and D.W. Rhind, “The History of GIS,” in Geographic Information Systems: Principle and Applications, Vol. 1, D.J. Maguire, M.F. Goodchild, and D.W. Rhind (eds.), Longman, Harlow, United Kingdom, 1991, pp. 21–43. 2. Vonderohe, A.P., L. Travis, R.L. Smith, and V. Tsai, NCHRP Report 359: Adaptation of Geographic In- formation Systems for Transportation, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, Wash- ington, D.C., 1993, 77 pp. 3. Prastacos, P., “Integrating GIS Technology in Urban Transportation Planning and Modeling,” Transporta- tion Research Record 1305, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, Washington, D.C., 1991, pp. 123–139. 4. Dueker, K.J., “Geographic Information Systems and Computer-Aided Mapping,” Journal of the American Planning Association, Vol. 53, 1987, pp. 383–390. 5. Lang, L., “Filling the Buses,” in Transportation GIS, Environmental Systems Research Institute Press, Redlands, Calif., 1999, pp. 45–54. 6. Adams, T.M., N.A. Koncz, and A.P. Vonderohe, NCHRP Report 460: Guidelines for the Implementa- tion of Multimodal Transportation Location Referenc- ing Systems, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, Washington, D.C., 2001, 88 pp. 7. Multisystems, Inc., with Applied Geographics, Inc., TCRP Report 60: Using Geographic Information Sys- tems for Welfare to Work Transportation Planning and Service Delivery: A Handbook, Transportation Re- search Board, National Research Council, Washing- ton, D.C., 2000, 83 pp. 8. “NTCIP 1400, TCIP Framework Standard,” Institute of Transportation Engineers, Washington, D.C., 2003 [Online]. Available: http://www.ntcip.com/. 9. Bus Stop Inventory Best Practices and Recommended Procedures, Federal Transit Administration, Washing- ton, D.C., 2000. 10. Best Practices for Using Geographic Data in Transit: A Location Referencing Guidebook, Federal Transit Administration, Washington, D.C., 2003 [Online]. Available: http://www.sasi-technology.com/Projects_ LRG.html. 11. Geographic Information Framework—Data Content Standards for Transportation Networks: Base Stan- dard, American National Standards Institute, Wash- ington, D.C., 2003. 12. Smith, B.L., P.K. Durvasula, and S.C. Brich, “GIS- Based Support System for On-Demand Flexroute Transit Service,” Journal of Public Transportation, Vol. 2, No. 4, 1999, pp. 1–17. 13. Crowson, J.L., D.E. Leasure, R.W. Smith, and F.P. Worthen, “A GIS for Public Transit” [Online]. Available:http://www.sci.tamucc.edu/~jcrowson/P359/ HTM. 14. “Maryland Transit Administration—Development of a Transit Database System,” McCormick Taylor Inc., Philadelphia, Pa. [Online]. Available: http://www. mccormicktaylor.com/GIS_Transit_Database.htm. 15. Catala, M., J. Alber, K. Bezdecny, and J. Flynn, GIS Applications at Florida Transit Agencies: Scope, Trends, and Issues, NCTR-473-02, BC137-39, Office of Research and Special Programs, U.S. Department of Transportation, Washington, D.C., May 2003, 79 pp. 16. Helmboldt, J., “Enhancing Transit Planning and De- cision-Making Via GIS Technologies,” Proceedings of the Twenty-Second ESRI International User Con- ference, San Diego, Calif., July 8–12, 2002. 17. Escudero, E. and S. Saxena, “Building a Regional Transit Information System and Regional Transit Da- tabase for the San Francisco Bay Area,” Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Geospatial Information Sys- tems for Transportation Symposium, Arlington, Va., Mar. 2001. 18. Transportation Case Studies in GIS. Case Study 6: GIS for Transit Planning at OCTA, Federal Transit Administration, Washington, D.C., 2001 [Online]. Available: http://tmip.fhwa.dot.gov/clearinghouse/docs/ gis/octa/. 19. Dueker, K.J., R. Vrana, and J. Orell, “Geographic In- formation System Applications for Tri-Met Needs Analysis and Preliminary Implementation Plan,” Transportation Northwest, Department of Civil Engi- neering, University of Washington, Seattle, 1990. 20. Ford, B.J. and D.K. Widner, “Shared Geography: Building a Common Street Centerline Resource to Serve State and County Governments,” in Proceed- ings URISA Annual Conference, Orlando, Fla., Aug. 19–23, 2000. 21. Attanucci, J.P. and R. Halvorsen, “What GIS Can Do for Transit Planning” [Online]. Available: http://www. fta.dot.gov/library/technology/symops/Attanucc.htm. 22. Kratzschmar, M. and J. Zhou, “Providing Real-Time Information to Transit Passengers Using Internet- Enabled GIS,” Proceedings of the Fourteenth GIS for Transportation Symposium, Arlington, Va., Mar. 2001. 23. Trépanier, M., “GIS Architecture for Transit Informa- tion Website,” Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual GIS for Transportation Symposium, Atlanta, Mar. 2002. 24. Trépanier, M., R. Chapleau, and B. Allard, “Transit Itinerary Calculation on the Web: Based on a Transit User Information System,” Journal of Public Trans- portation, Vol. 5, No. 3, 2002, pp. 13–32.

45 25. Saxena, S. and E. Escudero, “Utilizing GIS to Main- tain Complex Transit Data Structures,” Presented at the Fourteenth Annual Geospatial Information Sys- tems and Transportation Symposium, Atlanta, Mar. 2002. 26. Peng, Z.R., “An Internet GIS Approach to an Ad- vanced Transit Information Design,” Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Geospatial Information Sys- tems for Transportation Symposium, Minneapolis, Minn., Mar. 2000. 27. Chesnut, C. and J. Orton, “GIS/ITS Integration for Improved Transit System Design,” Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Geospatial Information Systems for Transportation Symposium, Arlington, Va., Mar. 2001. 28. Bills, T., “Estops—On-Line GIS-Based Transit Stop Inventory Maintenance Tool,” Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Geospatial Information Systems for Transportation Symposium, Arlington, Va., Mar. 2001. 29. Sutton, J., “Developing a Regional Transit Database for the San Francisco Bay Area,” Proceedings of the European Transport Conference 2000, Seminar E, the Planning and Management of Public Transport Sys- tems, PTRC (Planning and Transport Research and Computation), London, United Kingdom, 2000, pp. 235–245. 30. Crout, D., “Using GPS Technology to Collect and Maintain Transportation Data Within an Enterprise GIS,” Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Geospa- tial Information Systems for Transportation Sympo- sium, Minneapolis, Minn., Mar. 2000. 31. Sachau, G., “Systems Integration Issues in Transpor- tation Agencies,” Proceedings of the Thirteenth An- nual Geospatial Information Systems for Transporta- tion Symposium, Minneapolis, Minn., Mar., 2000. 32. Papacostas, C.S., “GIS Application to the Monitoring of Bus Operations,” Department of Civil Engineer- ing, University of Hawaii, 1995 [On-line]. Available: http://www.eng.hawaii.edu/~csp/Mygis/busgis.html. 33. Harris, B., “Internet GIS Rideshare for Online Paratransit Services,” Proceedings of the Fifteenth GIS for Transportation Symposium, Atlanta, Ga., Mar. 2002. 34. Casey, R.F., et al., Advanced Public Transportation Systems: The State of the Art Update 2000, Report DOT-VNTSC-FTA-99-1, Volpe National Transporta- tion Systems Center, Federal Transit Administration, Cambridge, Mass., Jan. 1999. 35. Casey, R.F., Advanced Public Transportation Systems Deployment in the United States Update, Report DOT-VNTSC-FTA-99-5, Volpe National Transporta- tion Systems Center, Federal Transit Administration, Cambridge, Mass., 1999, 46 pp. 36. Berman, M.J., R. Wade, D. Kreinheder, and T. Davis, “Transit Security Incident Analysis and Reporting Using GIS,” Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual ESRI User Conference, San Diego, Calif., 1997. 37. Kurt, C., P. Weaver, and D.A. Kroeger, GIS-Based In- tegrated Rural and Small Urban Transit Asset Man- agement System, Report MTC-A-2, Midwest Trans- portation Consortium, Iowa State University, Ames, Dec. 2003, 100 pp. 38. Wiggins, L., K. Deuker, J. Ferreira, C. Merry, Z.R. Peng, B. Spear, and L. Wiggins, “Application Chal- lenges for Geographic Information Science: Implica- tions for Research, Education, and Policy for Trans- portation Planning and Management,” URISA Journal, Vol. 12, No. 2, Spring 2000. 39. Transportation Case Studies in GIS, Travel Model Improvement Program, Federal Highway Administra- tion, Washington, D.C., 2000 [Online]. Available: http://tmip.tamu.edu/clearinghouse/docs/gis/. 40. Kurt, C.E. and L. Qiang, “GIS-Based Itinerary Plan- ning System for Multimodal and Fixed-Route Transit Network,” Proceedings of the Mid-Continent Trans- portation Symposium, Iowa State University, Ames, May 15–16, 2000. 41. Kasper, A., “Providing Map-Based Passenger Informa- tion in Urban and Rural Areas: A Maine to Boston Case Study,” Proceedings of the Seventeenth GIS in Transpor- tation Symposium, Rapid City, S.D., Mar. 29–31, 2004. 42. Radin, S., D. Jackson, D. Rosner, and S. Pierce, Trip Planning State of the Practice, Report FTA-TRI-11- 02.6, Economic Analysis Division, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, Cambridge, Mass., Prepared for the FTA Office of Research, Demon- stration, and Innovation and the Intelligent Transpor- tation Systems Joint Program Office, June 2002. 43. Zhou, Y., “GIS for Innovative Transit Planning,” Pro- ceedings of the 10th CalGIS Conference, San Jose, Calif., Feb. 2004. 44. “Web-Based Transit Trip Planners,” Urban Transpor- tation Monitor, Vol. 17, No. 2, 2002, pp. 7–11.

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TRB’s Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Synthesis 55: Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Applications in Transit examines the value of GIS to transit agencies in service and cost savings. The synthesis summarizes the experiences of a variety of transit agencies, with information from small- and medium-sized transit operators, as well as from large transit agencies. It documents current practices, effective applications, and challenges.

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