Monday 16 September to Friday 4 October 2019 in Orsay / Institut Pascal
PROGRAMME :
Semaine 1
Mardi 17 septembre
Matin 10H : Allan Larsen, Technical University of Danemark
Titre : Electric Urban Freight Transport and Logistics
Après-midi 14h30 : Patrick Klein, Technical University of Munich
Titre : Integrated Routing and Charge Scheduling of Electric Commercial Vehicles
Mercredi 18 septembre
Matin 10H : Katja Schechter, Massuchusetts Institute of Technology et ITF/OCDE
Titre: future of transport governance in the algorithmic age
Après-midi 14h30 : Fabio Antonialli , CentraleSupélec
International benchmark on experimentations with Autonomous Shuttles for Collective Transport
Jeudi 19 septembre
Matin 10H : Tino Henke, Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg
Titre: Analyzing the benefits of using mobile parcel lockers for last-mile deliveries
Vendredi 20 septembre
Matin 10H : Yasuhisa Hirata, Tohoku University
Titre : Safe Assistive Robots for Encouraging Human Physical Activities
Après-midi 14h30 : Francois Routhier , université Laval :
Titre : Mobility of individuals with disabilities : an inclusive approach
Semaine 2
Lundi 23 septembre
Après-midi 14h30 : Eliane Horschutz Nemoto, Hochschule Pforzheim
Titre : The AVENUE Stakeholder analysis – perceptions and attitudes of different actors towards autonomous driving
Mardi 24 septembre
Matin 10H : Maximilian Schiffer, Technical University of Munich
Titre : Do Self-driving Cars Swallow Public Transport? A Game-theoretical Perspective On Transportation Systems
Après-midi 14h30 : Tatiana Babicheva, Védécom/Université de Versailles SQ
Titre : Methods for the distributed and dynamic management of a fleet of autonomous taxis and shuttles
Mercredi 25 septembre
Matin 10H : Guy Fournier, Pforzheim University
Titre : Stakeholder of the future mobility paradigm in cities: the potential influence of internet economy and autonomous vehicles
Après-midi 14h30 : Reza Vosooghi, SystemX / CentraleSupélec
Titre : Modeling and simulation of new shared mobility systems
Jeudi 19 septembre
Matin 10H : Jan Fabian Ehmke, Magdeburg University
Titre : Creation of Individualized Sets of Multimodal Travel Itineraries
Après-midi 14h30 : Wei Chen, IRT SystemX/Université de Versailles SQ
Titre à préciser
Vendredi 20 septembre
Matin 10H : Arthur de Miranda Neto , SEVENGO/Universidade Federal de Lavras
Titre : Transforming Mobility Through a Business Platform
Semaine 3
Liste des orateurs :
Fabio Duarte, Massuchusetts Institute of Technology
Titre: Data-driven urban mobility
Dominique Feillet, Ecole des Mines de Saint Etienne
Titre: Vehicle routing optimization in cities
Ambrose Hanjiro, University of California
Titre : The future of e-mobility and the sustainable management of retired lithium batteries.
Erik Jenelius, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Titre: Public transport disruption management by collaboration with demand responsive services
Ole Jensen, Aalborg University
Titre: Mobilities Design – an emerging and interdisciplinary research field
Daniel Sperling, University of California
Titre: Three Revolutions: Steering Automated, Shared and Electric Vehicles to a Better Future
Ouri Wolfson, University of Illinois at Chicago
Titre : Spatio-temporal Resources in the autonomous-vehicles era
Context:
Smart cities must allow an urban or peri-urban territory to adapt dynamically to the human and goods mobility and transport needs of citizens as well as public and economic actors at different time scales. This without depriving elected representatives of their governance capacity, and by anticipating the evolution of the organization of the territory and its activities. Three main objectives are to be achieved:
- Understanding urban mobility: the purpose is to obtain a dynamic unique digital observatory of mobility to study the practices of mobility (leisure, access to public services, work, etc) and urban logistics, the positive and negative impacts on the population with respect to their diversity (usages and quality of life, mobility chosen or undergone, health, disability situations), the link between mobility and professional activities (work mobility, trade and delivery, co-working spaces, teleworking, …), the multimodal usages, the economic and energy needs and impacts, and the environment. Such an observatory has to deal not only with mobility data, but also many forms of sociological data (health, work, leisure, etc.) and it requires collaboration between humanities, social sciences, data sciences and system engineering. This observatory will also support applications and mobility simulation tools that will be developed.
- Enable agile and coordinated governance of mobility means and infrastructures, management of alerts and congestion for various modes of travel, information and interaction with users, in particular for the mobility of the first/last kilometres. One of the essential stakes for the control of congestion is the temporal and spatial coordination of the activities of the territory. That is to say both to think the territorial implementation of services and infrastructures (housing, work, services) according to the mobility, but also to coordinate the schedules of the different activities to reduce congestion with the support of stakeholders and users concerned.
- Allow medium and long-term dimensioning, deployment and adaptation of equipment, infrastructure and mobility services offered to users according to their specificity and the evolution of their needs and uses. It will involve interacting dynamically with the citizens for actions of awareness and training and to co-build through this collective intelligence (IC), new services and uses that will be validated first by simulation and feedback of experiments. These services and infrastructures in particular, must insure inclusive mobility. Simulation and prediction capabilities across a territory are therefore essential. Such activities could be implemented on a dynamic digital twin of the target territory dedicated to mobility.
Objective of the event:
The objective of this event is to gather for three weeks internationally recognized experts for their work on mobility, from the following scientific disciplines: data sciences and AI, human and social sciences and systems engineering. These three weeks will propose thematic workshops and seminars, working groups and reflections, and exchanges with the pilot territories. A plenary open conference will conclude the three weeks of collective work. The program proposed during the three weeks will be structured around two thematic axes:
Axis 1 (weeks 1 and 2): Understand and measure mobility: mobility data, quantitative and qualitative analyses, measuring impact.
Some possible topics :
- State of the art, available data
- Quantitative, qualitative data, needed for sociological analysis
- Legal aspects, open data governance.
Axis 2 (weeks 2 and 3) : Design and predict new ways and services of mobility: optimization and planning; mobility systems engineering; inclusive mobility; evaluation.
Some possible topics :
- Tools for dimensioning and planification of future infrastructures,
- Simulate and predict
- Specification, governance and democracy,
- Inform users and open twin,
- Mobility as a service (MaaS),
- To encourage and facilitate shared, sustainable and multi-modal mobility,
The themes and topics finally selected within the two axes will be defined with the invited experts and their proposals. About its use cases and feedbacks this program will be based on the program MoveInSaclay (http://www.moveinsaclay.fr), a program for new mobilities within three territories in Ile de France (Paris-Saclay, Saint Quentin en Yvelines, Versailles Grand Parc), involving also academic and industrial partners acting on mobility.
At the end of the program, a white paper will be written by the participants, summarizing their conclusions and recommendations. This white paper will be the basis for definition of future research actions and calls for projects and it will allow to initiate the writing of a joint book on the interdisciplinary approach to deal with mobility.
Program comity :
- Patrice Aknin (IRT SystemX)
- Dominique Barth (DAVID Lab – University of VersaillesSQ)
- Féthi Benouezdou (Védécom Institute)
- Wilco Burghout (Védécom Institute)
- Yoann Demoly (PRINTEMPS Lab – University of Versailles SQ/CNRS)
- Fabien Leurent (LVMT Lab – Ecole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées)
- Eric Monacelli (LISV Lab – University of Versailles SQ)
- Latifa Oukhellou (IFSTTAR-COSYS-GRETTIA)
- Jakob Puchinger (IRT SystemX/ LGI CentraleSupelec)
- Bernard Yannou (LGI Lab – CentraleSupelec)
- Laurent Willemez (PRINTEMPS Lab – University of Versailles SQ/CNRS)
Organisation and supports:
This program is also supported by french insitutes IRT SystemX and Védécom, by the French CNRS (MSH Paris-Saclay, SIHS federation) and by Université Paris-saclay.