Recent Work
The Center for Activity Systems Analysis (CASA) was established within the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California, Irvine to provide a focus for research in activity-based and agent-based models of travel and activity patterns and to foster interdisciplinary research in this and related areas. For over 25 years, CASA research associates have been on the leading edge of evolving research in activity systems analysis, establishing an international reputation in the study of complex travel behavior, activity-based approaches, agent-based models, microsimulation approaches, advanced data collection technologies including GIS and GPS, and empirical modeling.
There are 56 publications in this collection, published between 1995 and 2008. Showing 51 - 56.
Golob, Thomas F.; McNally, Michael G.: A Model of Activity Participation and Travel Interactions Between Household Heads, 1996
Golob, Thomas F.: A Model of Household Demand for Activity Participation and Mobility, 1996
McNally, Michael G.: An Activity-Based Microsimulation Model for Travel Demand Forecasting, 1996
McNally, Michael G.; Kulkarni, Anup: An Assessment of the Interaction of the Land Use-Transportation System and Travel Behavior, 1996
Golob, Thomas F.; Kim, Seyoung K.; Ren, Weiping Willliam: How Households Use Different Types of Vehicles: A Structural Driver Allocation and Usage Model, 1995
Recker, Will: The Household Activity Pattern Problem: General Formulation and Solution, 1995