Publication Alert! Check out the latest paper from CETOC researchers Guang Tian and Bob Danton, MS and CETOC Alum Bryce Jenkins, now available in the Journal of Transport Geography: "Quantifying the influence of telecommuting on household total trips and VMT generation." As telecommuting continues to spread to new sectors and among different socioeconomic and geographic populations, understanding its effects on our travel behavior is crucial for planners. If you joined or watched our first CETOC webinar where we discussed preliminary results from this project, you can now see the results of our final analysis! If not, you can find the webinar on our YouTube channel. Full paper at https://lnkd.in/eK6zR6AB
CETOC
Higher Education
New Orleans, LA 254 followers
Our mission is to cultivate resilient, transit-centered communities. A USDOT-funded Transportation Center.
About us
The Center for Transit-Oriented Communities (CETOC) is a U.S. Department of Transportation designated Tier 1 University Transportation Center. It focuses on preserving the environment by promoting transit access, multimodal infrastructure, compact and efficient land use patterns, and community resilience. CETOC's Mission is to cultivate resilient transit-centered communities that support residents' multimodal travel needs and preserve the environment.
- Website
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https://www.uno.edu/cetoc
External link for CETOC
- Industry
- Higher Education
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- New Orleans, LA
- Type
- Educational
- Founded
- 2023
- Specialties
- Transportation, Urban Planning, Transit-Oriented Development, Equity, Research, Built Environment, Multimodal Transit, Climate Resilience, Education & Workforce Development, Technology Transfer, and VMT
Locations
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Primary
2000 Lakeshore Drive
382 Milneburg Hall
New Orleans, LA 70148, US
Employees at CETOC
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Bob Danton, MS
Geographer, Project Manager & Transportation Researcher
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Guang Tian
Director of Center for Transit-Oriented Communities (CETOC) & Associate Professor at University of New Orleans
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Alexis Sager
Graduate Research Assistant | Center for Equitable Transit Oriented Communities (CETOC)
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Andrew Tritch
Urban Planning Graduate Student at University of New Orleans
Updates
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Publication Alert! Check out the latest publication from CETOC Researcher Xiang 'Jacob' Yan and colleagues on the impacts of AI on transportation planning and engineering, available now in the journal Transportation!
🔔 Excited to share our new article published in Transportation! https://lnkd.in/eQ2SrK5P ❓ How will AI shape the field of transportation planning and engineering? In this article, we surveyed transportation professionals to understand how they AI's efficiency and equity impacts on the transportation sector. We found widespread optimism about AI’s ability to enhance efficiency, reduce costs, and improve traveler experiences. However, opinions on AI's equity impacts are more divided—many express concerns about AI ethics and the potential for exacerbating existing inequalities. Using latent class cluster analysis (LCCA), we identified four distinct segments from the survey sample: 🔹 AI Optimists (~26%) – Believe AI will bring both efficiency and equity benefits. 🔹 AI Neutrals (~52%) – Have a neutral perception of AI's efficient and equity impacts. 🔹 AI Pessimists (~14%) – Doubt AI’s efficiency benefits and have strong concerns about AI's ethical and equity implications. 🔹 AI Skeptics (~10%) – Do not believe AI will make a major impact on the field of transportation. ✨ Respondents aged 40 or above are more likely to have negative attitudes than younger ones. Individuals with a post-graduate degree are more likely to hold neutral attitudes toward AI. Having a higher AI knowledge level increases the possibility of a respondent being an AI Skeptic and decreases the possibility for a younger professional being an AI Pessimist. Thanks Yiheng Qian for leading the work, Tejaswi Polimetla for assisting, and Thomas W. Sanchez, AICP for the wonderful collaboration!
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Publication Alert! "Using computer vision and street view images to assess bus stop amenities" is now available in Computers, Environment, and Urban Systems! The project, led by CETOC researchers at the University of Florida, offers an automated, low-cost, and generalizable approach for bus stop assessment. This is only the first stage of results from this ongoing project- keep yours eyes peeled as work continues! Check out the full paper now at https://lnkd.in/eQj__DMV! Xiang 'Jacob' Yan Guang Tian
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CETOC reposted this
🚌 Excited to share our latest article titled "Using computer vision and street view images to assess bus stop amenities"! https://lnkd.in/enJ4aqz7 Fascinated by the extensive bus stop census work done by Marcel Moran, PhD in San Francisco and MARTA Army Inc. in Atlanta, we aimed to use AI to help us see what amenities are available at each transit stop. To achieve this, we developed a transit amenities assessment system (TAAS) that integrates the latest YOLOv8 model, transfer learning, and a dynamic prediction algorithm, achieving efficient detection of shelters and benches with high accuracy and precision in major Florida cities. We showed that our model can be adapted to new contexts (e.g., San Francisco) with minimal fine-tuning. Our work provides a scalable, low-cost, and automated approach to bus stop amenities assessment, which can help cities bridge critical data gaps in transit infrastructure. Big shout out to Yilong Dai for leading this work, Luyu Liu for supervising Yilong, Kaiyue Wang for her supporting role, and Meiqing Li, Ph.D., AICP for the wonderful collaboration! We are grateful for the funding support from CETOC. The code for this project is available on GitHub: https://lnkd.in/e892UHC3 (We are currently finalizing the results regarding using TAAS to identify other amenity types such as trash bin, paved boarding area, crosswalks, and pedestrian-level lighting. We are also collaborating with Guang Tian and Bob Danton, MS and Reid Ewing to apply TAAS to Louisiana and Utah cities. Stay tuned for future updates!)
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Time flies! CETOC's Year 3 Request for Proposals is LIVE! All faculty, research faculty, and post-doctoral researchers at any of our consortium member universities (University of New Orleans, Florida Atlantic University, University of Florida, University of Colorado Denver, and University of Utah) are eligible to apply! The RFP can be found at https://lnkd.in/gEjaHqki under "Resources for PIs." Here's to the future of transportation research! U.S. Department of Transportation UNO Transportation Institute UFTI University of Florida Transportation Institute Center for Urban and Environmental Solutions at Florida Atlantic University University of Utah - Department of City & Metropolitan Planning Guang Tian Reid Ewing Xilei Zhao Xiang 'Jacob' Yan Serena Hoermann John L. Renne Aditi Misra Manish Shirgaokar Tara Tolford, AICP Alessandro Rigolon Bob Danton, MS
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Meet the people of CETOC! Eliana Duarte is a research assistant at CETOC. She recently completed a bachelor's degree in civil engineering at the University of Florida, and she is planning to begin a Ph.D. program in the fall. Her research focuses on the interactions between the built environment and travel behavior to contribute to more efficient and equitable transportation systems. In her free time, she enjoys snowboarding, attending concerts, and traveling.
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Congratulations to CETOC Director Guang Tian for his most recent grant from the Louisiana Transportation Research Center as Co-PI with Bethany Stich to address truck parking issues across the state of Louisiana!
University of New Orleans professor Dr. Bethany Stich received a $220,000 research grant from the Louisiana Transportation Research Center to identify solutions to the state’s truck parking problem. The shortage of truck parking is a longstanding issue in the trucking industry, according to Stich. Nationally, there are more than 11 truck drivers for every one parking space. “Truck drivers need to rest and stage their trucks,” said Stich, "but many truck parking locations have irregularly shaped ‘footprints’ and lack identifiable delineation for truck parking spaces. As a result, a given location may be able to accommodate 25 trucks, but it may only yield space for 13 or 14 trucks. Providing real-time truck parking availability information for approaching trucks on the highway is problematic but utterly necessary.” Dr. Stich is the principal investigator on the grant, and Dr. Guang Tian, associate professor of planning and urban studies, is the co-principal investigator. UNO Transportation Institute
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What a week! CETOC PIs and students presented dozens of research projects at this year's Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.- researchers and students from all five of our consortium member universities presented work, and still found time to gather together for networking events and attend dozens of other sessions to learn from other researchers and industry members and drive our research forward! These students are the future of transportation! #TRBAM #TRB #TransportationResearch University of New Orleans University of Florida Florida Atlantic University University of Utah University of Colorado Denver UFTI University of Florida Transportation Institute Center for Urban and Environmental Solutions at Florida Atlantic University UNO Transportation Institute
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CETOC reposted this
Thrilled to join over 13,000 researchers and professionals at the 2025 National Academies’ Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. This event showcases cutting-edge transportation research and offers a week of learning, discoveries, and networking. Proud to attend alongside my colleagues from the UNO Transportation Institute. #TRBAM2025 #CETOC #UNOTI #UNO #Transportation
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Thanks to all who joined last night!
Policy Analysis| Research| Program Management| Consulting| Economic Development| Multimodal Transportation Systems| International Trade Policy
At a networking event held in the sidelines of the National Academies- Transportation Research Board Annual Conference, 2025 (TRB), with members of the Center for Transit Oriented Communities (CETOC) #TRBAM2025 #NationalAcademies #WashingtonDC
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