• HOME
  • MyTRB
  • CONTACT US
  • DIRECTORY
  • E-NEWSLETTER
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • FOLLOW US
  • RSS
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
Transportation Research Board
  • HOME
    • MyTRB
    • CONTACT US
    • DIRECTORY
    • E-NEWSLETTER
    • SUBSCRIBE
    • FOLLOW US
    • RSS
  • About TRB
    • Get Involved with TRB
    • Mission & Services
    • Strategic Plan
    • Centennial Celebration
    • TRB Divisions
      • Executive Office
      • Administration & Finance
      • Cooperative Research Programs
      • Studies and Special Programs
      • Strategic Highway Research Program 2
      • Technical Activities
    • Sponsors & Affiliates
    • Awards
    • Facilities & Directions
    • Job Openings
  • Annual Meeting
    • Program
    • Registration
    • Resource Pages
    • Exhibits & Marketing Opportunities
    • Online Program
    • Announcements
  • Calendar
  • Committees & Panels
    • Executive Committee
    • Standing Committees
    • Policy Committees
    • Marine Board Members
    • Committee & Panel Homepages
    • Cooperative Research Panels
      • Highway (NCHRP)
      • Transit (TCRP)
      • Airport (ACRP)
      • Freight (NCFRP)
      • Hazardous Materials (HMCRP)
      • Rail (NCRRP)
    • Synthesis Panels
      • Highway
      • Transit
      • Airport
    • IDEA
      • Safety IDEA
  • MyTRB
  • Programs
    • Cooperative Research
      • Highway (NCHRP)
      • Transit (TCRP)
      • Airport (ACRP)
      • Behavioral Traffic Safety (BTSCRP)
      • Freight (NCFRP)
      • Hazardous Materials (HMCRP)
      • Rail (NCRRP)
    • Synthesis
      • Highway
      • Transit
      • Airport
      • Truck & Bus Safety
    • Innovations Deserving Exploratory Analysis (IDEA)
    • Legal Research
    • Marine Board
    • Consensus and Advisory Studies
    • Strategic Highway Research Program 2 (SHRP 2)
      • SHRP 2 Naturalistic Driving Study Data Access
      • SHRP 2 Archives
    • Transportation Research Information Services (TRIS)
  • Projects
    • Find a Project
    • Requests for Proposals
    • Requests for Information
    • Upcoming Projects
  • Publications
    • Bookstore
    • Subscription Services
    • by Series
    • by Subject
    • E-Newsletter
    • Transportation Research Record Online
    • Publications Index
    • Errata
  • Resources & Databases
    • Webinars
    • Conference Recordings
    • Research In Progress (RiP)
    • Research Needs Statements (RNS)
    • TRID (A Transportation Research Database)
    • Transportation Research Thesaurus (TRT)
    • SHRP 2 Naturalistic Driving Study Data Access
    • Online Directory
    • Library
    • Research Funding
    • Careers in Motion Job Center
  • Provide Feedback
  • Connect with TRB
HOME MyTRB CONTACT US DIRECTORY E-NEWSLETTER FOLLOW US RSS


About TRB
Get Involved with TRB
Mission & Services
Strategic Plan
Centennial Celebration
TRB Divisions
Executive Office
Administration & Finance
Cooperative Research Programs
Studies and Special Programs
Strategic Highway Research Program 2
Technical Activities
Sponsors & Affiliates
Awards
Facilities & Directions
Job Openings
Annual Meeting
Announcements
Program
Online Program
Curated Program
Paper Submission
Registration
Exhibits & Marketing Opportunities
Virtual Resource Pages
Career Fair
Media Page
Future AMs
Contact Us
Past Programs
Calendar

Committees & Panels
Executive Committee
Standing Committees 
Policy Committees
Marine Board Members
Committee & Panel Homepages
Cooperative Research Panels
Highway (NCHRP)
Transit (TCRP)
Airport (ACRP)
Freight (NCFRP)
Hazardous Materials (HMCRP)
Rail (NCRRP)
Synthesis Panels
Highway
Transit
Airport
IDEA
Safety IDEA
Programs

Cooperative Research
Highway (NCHRP)
Transit (TCRP)
Airport (ACRP)
Behavioral Traffic Safety (BTSCRP)
Freight (NCFRP)
Hazardous Materials (HMCRP)
Rail (NCRRP)
Synthesis
Highway
Transit
Airport
Truck & Bus Safety
Innovations Deserving Exploratory Analysis (IDEA)
Legal Research
Marine Board
Consensus and Advisory Studies
Strategic Highway Research Program 2 (SHRP 2)
SHRP 2 Naturalistic Driving Study Data Access
SHRP 2 Archives
Transportation Research Information Services (TRIS)


Projects
Find a Project
Requests for Proposals
Requests for Information
Upcoming Projects
Publications
 
Bookstore
Subscription Services
by Series
by Subject
E-Newsletter
Transportation Research Record Online
Publications Index
Errata
 
Resources & Databases

Webinars
Conference Recordings
Research In Progress (RiP)
Research Needs Statements (RNS)
TRID (A Transportation Research Database)
Transportation Research Thesaurus (TRT)
SHRP 2 Naturalistic Driving Study Data Access
Online Directory
Library
Research Funding
Careers in Motion Job Center


Sign up for the TRB Newsletter
Transportation Research Board > Blurbs > The Era of Smart Infrastructure Demands Strong Data, Technology Management



The Era of Smart Infrastructure Demands Strong Data, Technology Management
181882

The Era of Smart Infrastructure Demands Strong Data, Technology Management

Asset management is necessary to keep transportation moving. Generally, it’s a process of maintaining, upgrading, and expanding physical assets. And we are on the verge of using technology to make it even more exciting. With limited staff and budgets, advanced technology appeals to managers in airports, sea ports, rail systems, transit agencies, and state departments of transportation alike.

University of Washington Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Yinhai Wang is the incoming chair of TRB’s Standing Technical Committee on Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Computing Applications. He sees the next big development of artificial intelligence (AI) in transportation asset management as a way to address safety.

“Volume and traffic demand forecasting are helpful for operations, but there are more important applications of AI in transportation asset management, such as using it to predict which bridge is getting close to the end of its useful lifespan in time to prepare and budget. I believe there is a great potential to use AI for infrastructure risk and deterioration assessments,” he says.

TRB recently offered a webinar that prepared participants to do just that. Presenters offered a closer look at how AI can be applied to highway data to better explain and predict bridge system performance. The session also noted the potential of AI and deep learning to improve sensor signal data, and explained how these technologies can support design, operations, and management of highway systems.

“Data management skills are particularly needed in the transportation industry. Very often, traffic data are collected and stored by separate data management systems without sufficient quality control. To make existing datasets ready for AI-based applications, transportation professionals need to use data management tools and skills to ensure data quality, properly integrate available datasets, and label and mark them as needed,” reiterates Wang.

In talking about his work with the PacTrans Workforce Development Institute he emphasizes the shortage of AI engineers in transportation and compares their role to that of a restaurant chef.

“You can have all the materials at hand, but the chef is the most critical part to turn them into delicious meals for a restaurant. AI engineers are critical to making valuable and innovative uses of transportation data. Given the lack of AI engineers, state departments of transportation may need to find a way to collaborate with universities and IT companies to get ready for the coming smart infrastructure age.”

Those considering a career options, including those in AI, may be inspired to find their calling by watching Your Career in Transportation.

Understand and plan for the shifting and rapidly increasing role of technology
As new tools, technologies, materials, and approaches proliferate in the transportation system, the ways highway agencies maintain, preserve, and renew infrastructure is expected to shift. The TRB National Cooperative Highway Research Program's (NCHRP) Strategic Issues Facing Transportation, Volume 7: Preservation, Maintenance, and Renewal of Highway Infrastructure places emphasis on preparing for plausible future scenarios. The authors develop a pathway to guide transportation agencies in advancing the implementation of emerging practices through a process involving awareness, advocacy, assessment, adoption, and action planning.

AI offers high potential for practical value. NCHRP is accepting proposals through March 25 to aid state departments of transportation in transitioning to a more advanced state of practice with machine learning by demonstrating the feasibility and understanding skills, resources, costs, benefits, and limitations of the technology. To make the most of the technology, agencies also need to share frameworks, tools, and guidance when there are common use cases.

Combining two new technologies, a study published in Transportation Research Record (TRR) presents a drone-mountable, real-time AI framework for road asset classification. With a small target dataset, the authors leveraged transfer learning to fine-tune an existing dataset to their target. Overall, their results demonstrated 81.33% accuracy on the test set, showing that it is possible to use AI in this way.

Rail offers unique challenges that may make AI even more appealing. Modifying track structures is particularly disruptive and many factors can influence reference measurements. A TRB Rail Safety Innovations Deserving Exploratory Analysis (IDEA) report explores an approach for stress state prediction of continuous welded rail using contactless acoustic sensing and machine learning methods. An impulse-based experimental device was designed and deployed to excite multiple vibrational modes in rail simultaneously. What’s more, this can be done without track structure modification, nor hazards to humans, and it eliminates the need for reference measurements and reduces influences.

TRB’s Transit Research Cooperative Program (TCRP) also notes the potential for AI on the rails. Maintenance Planning for Rail Asset Management – Current Practices explores video assistance and suggests that AI could be implemented to assist in testing for detection of rolling contact fatigue and possible internal rail defects that develop.

Resources to help manage data

Data management is different from data analysis. Both require quite a bit of preliminary work and understanding.

In October 2020, TRB offered a webinar to help attendees dip their toes into the sea of data governance and asset management. Presenter slides are available that cover a variety of tools, including one specifically for the maritime system.

TRB's Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) has taken a look at Computerized Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS) for asset management across various airport systems. ACRP’s Guidebook for Advanced Computerized Maintenance Management System Integration at Airports develops guidance on the steps necessary to implement a CMMS, factors for consideration in prioritizing which systems to include using a phased approach, and the steps for integrating CMMS data into performance management and business decision making.

An increasing number of systems depend on deep neural networks, from autonomous vehicles to social media platforms that influence political discourse. Scientists are also beginning to rely more on deep learning for AI as a knowledge discovery tool as research becomes ever more data driven. The recording of the National Academy of Sciences’ lecture on the science of deep learning is available.

Scratching the surface with Edge AI
Wang is particularly excited to see how Edge AI will affect the future of transportation asset management and connected vehicle operations. Edge AI implements Machine Learning algorithms in edge devices to conduct quick data collection, fusion, analysis, and communication with roadway users. Benefits of Edge AI include quick response time, low bandwidth to communicate with transportation management centers, and easy deployments.

“We’ve developed an Edge AI technology at the University of Washington Smart Transportation Applications and Research Laboratory (STAR Lab). We are currently testing the technology in several locations. For example, sponsored by the Federal Highway Administration State Transportation Innovation Council program, we are working with the City of Bellevue and the City of Lynnwood in Washington State to use the technology for road surface condition and traffic sensing, data fusion, and data processing. A warning message will be sent to road users when warranted through connected vehicles or social media for traffic safety improvement. This technology has a lot of potential in rural areas where broadband communication infrastructure may not be available.”

Launch into the future of asset management with TRB
Join TRB this summer for the National Conference on Transportation Asset Management. Open to all registrants, the conferences’ tracks are implementation, data governance and tools, managing risk, partners and peers, and sustaining asset management.

Use MyTRB.org to become a friend of TRB’s Standing Technical Committee on Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Computing Applications and connect with experts like Wang. Friends of committees receive updates on and can volunteer to participate in committee activities.

Get involved in this work with the Cooperative Research Programs. Look for ongoing information on new projects, requests for proposals, or to nominate yourself or others to serve on a project panel. Submit problem statement research ideas and find new announcements in TRB’s weekly newsletter or on the homepages for the ACRP, NCHRP, and the TCRP.





TRB reports cited in this article:
  • ACRP Research Report 155: Guidebook for Advanced Computerized Maintenance Management System Integration at Airports
  • NCHRP Report 750: Strategic Issues Facing Transportation, Volume 7: Preservation, Maintenance, and Renewal of Highway Infrastructure
  • TCRP Synthesis 151: Maintenance Planning for Rail Asset Management – Current Practices
  • E Circular 168:Artificial Intelligence Applications to Critical Transportation Issues




TRB events:
  • TRB Webinar: Using Artificial Intelligence to Predict Deterioration of Highway Bridges
  • TRB Webinar: Governing Data to Improve Transportation Asset Management
  • Transportation Asset Management in a COVID-19 World
  • National Conference on Transportation Asset Management 2021


IDEA reports:
  • Rail Safety IDEA Final Report 41: Vibration-based Longitudinal Rail Stress Estimation Exploiting Acoustic Measurement and Machine Learning


Cooperative Research Program active projects:
  • Implementing and Leveraging Machine Learning at State Departments of Transportation


TRB Standing Committees:
  • Standing Technical Committee on Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Computing Applications
  • Standing Technical Committee on Transportation Asset Management


Articles published in TRR:
  • Low-Power Drone-Mountable Real-Time Artificial Intelligence Framework for Road Asset Classification


Additional TRB resources:
  • Snap Search on Asset Management
  • Your Career in Transportation video
  • Embracing the Future of Transportation, TR News Sept-Oct 2020
  • ACRP Research Report 191: A Primer to Prepare for the Connected Airport and the Internet of Things


Additional National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine resources:
  • Science of Deep Learning video
  • Artificial Intelligence: An International Dialogue




Contact: Beth Ewoldsen, Content Strategist Transportation Research Board 202-334-2353; bewoldsen@nas.edu Published March 1, 2021


E-Newsletter Type: TRB News    


This Summary Last Modified On: 3/1/2021
Text Size: Increase Text Size Decrease Text Size
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
500 Fifth Street, NW | Washington, DC 20001 | T: 202.334.2000
Copyright © 2021 National Academy of Sciences. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Statement
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 500 Fifth Street, NW | Washington, DC 20001 | T: 202.334.2000 Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Statement

Loading... Loading...
Please click here to view our sponsor's message.