CAMMSE SUCCESSFULLY HELD ITS 2021 FOURTH ANNUAL CAMMSE VIRTUAL RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM FROM NOVEMBER 4-5, 2021.

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CAMMSE (Center for Advanced Multimodal Mobility Solutions and Education) successfully held its Fourth Annual CAMMSE Virtual Research Symposium from November 4-5, 2021, which focused on showcasing CAMMSE faculty and student research within different university affiliates of CAMMSE. We had scheduled two keynote presentations, one invited speaker session, three technical sessions and one student lightning presentation session. More detailed information about our Fourth Annual CAMMSE Virtual Research Symposium can be found in the final program booklet and the recorded videos can be accessed below. PDHs were offered for all sessions.

2021 FOURTH ANNUAL CAMMSE VIRTUAL RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM (NOVEMBER 4-5, 2021)

CAMMSE students made a total of 18 wonderful presentations. 11 students won the presentation awards and detailed information is provided below:

First Place (two students):
Jennifer Hall, Modeling Impacts of Covid-19 On Capital Metro Ridership, UT Austin
Jie Zhao, Effect of Connected and Autonomous Vehicles on Supply Chain Performance, WSU

Second Place (Four):
Bo Qiu, Travel Time Forecasting on a Freeway Corridor: a Dynamic Information Fusion Model based on the Random Forests Approach, UNC Charlotte
Juan Li, The Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Maritime Transportation and Port Operation, TSU
Sudipta Chowdhury, Developing a Future-proofed Transportation Infrastructure Planning Framework Using Topic Modeling and Association Rule Mining, UCONN
Sruthi Mantri, Prioritizing people – Mixed Equilibrium Assignment for AV Based on Occupancy, UCONN

Third Place (Five):
Karen M Kalter, Predicting Interchange Ramp Volumes from Interchange Characteristics, UT Austin
Li Song, Traffic Signal Control in Connected and Automated Environment: A Transfer-Based Deep Reinforcement Learning Approach While Accounting for Mixed Traffic Flow on Varying Information Levels, UNC Charlotte
Kun Qian, Multi-Robot Dynamical Source Seeking in Unknown Environments, UT Austin
Quinn Packer, Estimation of Pedestrian Compliance at Signalized Intersections Considering Demographic and Geographic Factors, UCONN
Lijie Zhou, A Study of the Impact of Infrastructures on Public Bicycle-Sharing System Demand, TSU

Many thanks again to our three judges and all the student presenters, for your time and hard work!