Connected and Autonomous Vehicles: Challenges and Opportunities to Improve Mobility and Safety in the United States

 Connected and Autonomous Vehicles: Challenges and Opportunities to Improve Mobility and Safety in the United States
E302, New Bund Campus, NYU Shanghai
Monday, December 02, 2024 - 12:00 - 13:00
Speaker
Dr. Camille Kamga
 
Abstract
 
For the past hundred years, innovation within the automotive sector has brought major technological advances, leading to safer, cleaner, and more affordable vehicles. While the dream of an automated vehicle-highway system has been around for some time, we are finally witnessing a convergence of technologies that promise to make that dream a reality. These technologies include dramatic advances in wireless communications, sensing, control, computing and automation, which are promising to transform transportation as we currently view it.  Connected and autonomous cars will transform our lives, influencing everything from the routes we take to work to how we find the closest parking spot. What are the challenges and opportunities that these technologies will bring on our transportation system?
 
About Dr. Kamga
 
Dr. Camille Kamga is the Director for the University Transportation Research Center (UTRC) and Professor of Civil Engineering at the City College of the City University of New York. UTRC is the designated U.S. Department of Transportation’s University Transportation Center (UTC) for the Federal Region 2 that includes New York, New Jersey, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands. UTRC, a consortium of 20 major universities located in Federal Region 2, was established in 1987, in recognition that transportation plays a key role in the nation’s economy and in the quality of people’s lives.

Dr. Kamga’s research expertise is in transportation systems with a particular focus on the interaction between new transportation technologies, traffic and transit management, and roadway utilization to address the transportation challenges facing our cities.

Dr. Kamga’s research has informed transit policies in New York. His work on new technologies for transit has been adopted and implemented in NYC Transit which has installed travel information kiosks at subway stations. Dr. Kamga’s work has fostered the sharing of taxi AVL data by NYC Taxi and Limousine Commission to the public and researchers. His work on the cost/benefits evaluation of adaptive traffic signals has informed the NY State Department of Transportation on appropriate location for such a system throughout the state. Another of his work with the analysis of ADAS data has documented the safety benefit of ADAS has allowed NYC Department of Citywide Administrative Services to extend the system on most of the NY city vehicle fleet.

Dr. Kamga’s research has been funded by numerous grants from the U.S. Department of Transportation; the New York State Department of Transportation; the New York Metropolitan Transportation Council; the New York State Energy and Research Development Authority; the New Jersey Department of Transportation; New York City Transit; the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey; and the National Science Foundation.

Dr. Kamga continues to actively participate in numerous transportation-related projects at UTRC. His research interests include intelligent transportation system; modeling and traffic simulation; analysis of very large transportation networks; use of real-time information for travel; transportation modeling using mobile sensors; transportation planning and policy, transportation operations; sustainability and environment; and transportation safety.