Announcing the Final Examination of Nami Abdulwakil Alsulami for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
This dissertation conducted an extensive examination of dockless e-scooter dynamics using high-resolution trip data from Austin, Texas. Four studies were conducted to capture the multifaceted nature of e-scooter operations and demand. The first study aimed to identify and quantify the influence of contributing factors affecting e-scooter demand by partitioning the data by time period for weekdays and weekends. Utilizing a joint panel linear regression (JPLR) model, significant associations were observed between e-scooter demand and variables such as sociodemographic attributes, transportation infrastructure, land use, meteorological attributes, and situational factors. The second study shifted focus to shared e-scooter origin-destination (OD) flows in the urban region. By employing a joint binary logit-fractional split model, e-scooter OD flows were analyzed, emphasizing variations across distinct time periods and the subsequent implications for e-scooter deployment and rebalancing strategies. The third study delved into e-scooter utilization efficiency, introducing a time-to-book (TtB) measure. Through a Mixed Grouped Ordered Logit (MGOL) model, the study highlighted variations between regular and peak weeks, offering operators a chance to enhance fleet utilization. The final study addressed the broader context of the e-scooter industry, investigating the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. By analyzing datasets spanning January 2019 through December 2021, a spatial approach illuminated changes in e-scooter demand patterns before, during, and after the pandemic, highlighting the effects of COVID-19-related factors and vaccine attributes on e-scooter trends. These collective insights from the four studies provide valuable contributions to understanding and enhancing e-scooter operations in urban landscapes
Committee in Charge:
Naveen Eluru, Chair, Civil Engineering
Shamsunnahar Yasmin, Senior Lecturer/Senior Research Fellow Queensland University of Technology (QUT) Centre for
Accident Research & Road Safety - Queensland (CARRS-Q) Brisbane, Australia
Ahmad Elshennawy, Industrial Engineering & Management Systems
Hatem Abou-Senna, Department of Civil, Environmental & Construction Engineering