Journal of Advanced Transportation

Transitions Towards Electrification, Automation, and Shared Mobility for Urban Transport


Publishing date
01 May 2022
Status
Closed
Submission deadline
24 Dec 2021

Lead Editor

1University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai, China

2Monash University, Bandar Sunway, Malaysia

3School of Architecture and Design, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu China, Chengdu, China

4Shanghai Maritime University, Shanghai, China

This issue is now closed for submissions.

Transitions Towards Electrification, Automation, and Shared Mobility for Urban Transport

This issue is now closed for submissions.

Description

Electrification, automation, and shared mobility are the 3 Revolutions (3Rs) recently emerging in urban transport, which will fundamentally change urban transport around the world. Each revolution may bring not only substantial benefits but also tough challenges. Vehicle electrification can cut vehicle energy use and CO2 emissions. However, for electrification to have maximum benefits, power generation must be strongly shifted away from fossil fuels and deeply decarbonized to achieve the goal of “carbon neutrality” set by many countries. In addition, these vehicles will likely remain expensive for at least another decade. Automation can provide important safety benefits, reduce labor costs, enable cheaper travel, and more productive use of time.

However, by lowering the cost of travel in terms of time and money, automation would likely induce more trips and dramatically reduce the number of jobs in transportation. Shared mobility, whether through shared vehicles or trips, has the potential to lead to more efficient use of urban space, reduce traffic congestion, enable more walking and cycling trips, cut energy use and emissions, and consequently improve urban livability. However, this would require large increases in load factors (passengers per vehicle trip) and a range of supporting policies. Therefore, there is still much uncertainty in the transitions towards electrification, automation, and shared mobility for urban transport.

This Special Issue aims to solicit high-quality research to better understand the transitional pathways of the 3 revolutions and their combinations. The scope of the Special Issue includes (but is not limited to) the following technologies: electric vehicles, connected and autonomous vehicles, shared micromobility (e-scooter sharing, station-based and dockless bike-sharing, and shared e-bikes), carsharing, ridesharing, ride splitting, and other shared mobility services. We call for both original research and review articles related to the behaviors, operations, impacts, and policies of the above technologies to guide industry investment and government decision-making for the transition towards electrification, automation, and shared mobility.

Potential topics include but are not limited to the following:

  • Characterization of shared mobility, electric vehicles, or autonomous vehicles based on the real-world observed data
  • Operation optimization of shared mobility, electric vehicles, or autonomous vehicles using artificial intelligence
  • Pricing strategies and monetary/social incentives for shared mobility, electric vehicles, or autonomous vehicles
  • Potential impacts of shared mobility, electric vehicles or autonomous vehicles on car ownership, traffic congestion, energy, environment
  • Innovative strategies and policies to promote shared mobility, electric vehicles or autonomous vehicles
  • Factors influencing users’ willingness to adopt shared mobility, electric vehicles or autonomous vehicles
  • Relationship between the travel demand/behaviors of shared mobility and the built environment
  • Infrastructure planning and management for shared electric and autonomous transport systems
  • Efficiency, safety, and reliability analysis of shared electric and autonomous transport systems

Articles

  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 7772401
  • - Research Article

Exploring the Spatially Heterogeneous Effects of the Built Environment on Bike-Sharing Usage during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Hongtai Yang | Zishuo Guo | ... | Jinghai Huo
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 8686584
  • - Research Article

Mixed Multinomial Probit Model Accommodating Flexible Covariance Structure and Random Taste Variation: An Application to Commute Mode Choice Behavior

Ke Wang | Xin Ye | Hongcheng Gan
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 5300088
  • - Research Article

The Car-Purchasing Intention of the Youth in the Context of Online Car-Hailing: The Extended Theory of Planned Behavior

Yihui Huang | Fei Yang | ... | Zhennan Ding
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 5664004
  • - Research Article

Analysis of the Relationship between Dockless Bicycle-Sharing and the Metro: Connection, Competition, and Complementation

Yuru Wu | Weifeng Li | ... | Jian Li
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 7489897
  • - Research Article

Factors Influencing Users’ Willingness to Adopt Connected and Autonomous Vehicles: Net and Configurational Effects Analysis Using PLS-SEM and FsQCA

Gang Li | Yikai Liang | ... | Xiangbo Chang
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 5218254
  • - Research Article

Hotspots Identification and Classification of Dockless Bicycle Sharing Service under Electric Fence Circumstances

Ying Hui | Yingkun Xie | ... | Xinyuan Wang
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 1116221
  • - Research Article

Parking Permit Scheme for Morning Commute considering Parking Search

Duo Xu | Huijun Sun
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 1785199
  • - Research Article

Pricing Method of the Flexible Bus Service Based on Cumulative Prospect Theory

Wanjing Ma | Yuhang Guo | ... | Lei Wang
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 2920532
  • - Research Article

Pick-Up and Delivery Problem for Sequentially Consolidated Urban Transportation with Mixed and Multi-Pupropse Vehicle Fleet

Haoye Chen | Jonas Hatzenbühler | Erik Jenelius
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2022
  • - Article ID 3815306
  • - Research Article

A Practical and Economical Ultra-wideband Base Station Placement Approach for Indoor Autonomous Driving Systems

Shengchuan Jiang | Cong Zhao | ... | Yuchuan Du
Journal of Advanced Transportation
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