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Simon Washington Author & Editor

Simon Washington is Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Queensland.

He is recognized internationally for his contributions in the fields of behavioral econometrics

applied in the areas of transport and urban planning, transport safety and risk across

all travel modes, and travel behavior. He is Associate Editor or Editorial Advisory Board

Member on six leading international transport journals (Korean Journal of Transportation

Engineering; Analytic Methods in Accident Research; Accident Analysis and Prevention; Journal of

Transport and Health; Transportation Research Part A; and Journal of Sustainable Transportation).

He has authored or co-authored more than 100 peer-reviewed journal articles and a second

edition of a textbook adopted in over 20 countries, and 6 book chapters. He has been lead

investigator on more than $26 million on externally supported research and has secured

nationally competitive research grants in Australia including the Australian Research

Council, the National Health and Medical Research Council, and the Cooperative Research

Center, and in the United States from the National Academy of Sciences, the National

Highway Traffic and Safety Administration, and the Federal Highway Administration.

Prior to joining the University of Queensland he served on the faculties of the Queensland

University of Technology, University of California Berkeley, Arizona State University,

the University of Arizona, and the Georgia Institute of Technology. He has been visiting

professor at Ajou University (South Korea), University of Sydney, and Loughborough

University (UK).

Professor Matthew Karlaftis passed away unexpectedly in June 2014. He did extensive

work in the areas of urban transportation, transportation planning and operations, and

emergency response. He was a coauthor of an international bestselling book on transportation

econometrics and statistics, two textbooks on transportation planning and

public transportation, many book chapters, more than 100 publications in peer-reviewed

journals, and many publications in conference proceedings, all highly cited worldwide.

He participated in more than 45 national and European research projects as the principal

or co-principal investigator. He was deeply involved in editorial activities. He served as

the editor in chief for Transportation Research Part C, European editor of ASCE’s Journal of

Transportation Engineering, associate editor of ASCE’s Journal of Infrastructure Systems, and

an editorial board member for eight other journals. He was the recipient of the Fulbright

Scholar Grant (2006–2007), the ASCE Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize

(2005), the TRB ABJ80 Committee on Statistical Methods Best Paper Award (2009), and the

ASCE State-of-the-Art Paper Award (2011). He served on many technical committees and

was a member of a variety of professional organizations and honor societies in Greece and

the United States. He had a long association with the Hellenic Institute of Transportation

Engineers where he served as vice president (2010–2012) and president (2012–2014).

Fred Mannering is Professor of Civil and Environ mental Engineering (with a courtesy

appointment in Economics) at the University of South Florida. He received his undergraduate

degree from the University of Saskatchewan, masters from Purdue University, and

doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Prior to joining the University

of South Florida, he was an Assistant Professor at the Pennsylvania State University,

Professor and Department Chair at the University of Washington, and School Head and

Charles Pankow Professor at Purdue University. His research interests are in the application

of econometric and statistical methods to the analysis of highway safety, transportation

economics, vehicle demand, travel behavior and a variety of other engineering-related

problems. He has published extensively with over 140 journal articles and two books:

Principles of Highway Engineering and Traffic Analysis and Statistical and Econometric Methods

for Transportation Data Analysis. He has received numerous awards and recognitions

including ASCE’s Wilbur S. Smith Award (2005), James Laurie Prize (2009), and Arthur

M. Wellington Prize (2009). He has been acknowledged as a Web-of-Science Highly Cited

Researcher (2019). Dr. Mannering is currently Editor-in-Chief (and founding Editor) of the

Elsevier Science journal Analytic Methods in Accident Research and previous Editor-in-Chief

(2003–2012) and current Distinguished Editorial Board Member of the Elsevier Science

journal Transportation Research Part B: Methodological. He also serves on the editorial boards

of Accident Analysis and Prevention and Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies.

Panagiotis Anastasopoulos is Associate Professor and Stephen E. Still Chair of

Transportation Engineering, in the Department of Civil, Structural and Environmental

Engineering at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. He is also

the Director of the Stephen Still Institute for Sustainable Transportation and Logistics

at University at Buffalo. He received his bachelor’s degree from the Athens University

of Economics and Business, and his master’s and doctorate from Purdue University. His

research interests include statistical and econometric modeling of engineering problems,

transportation safety, planning for flying cars, urban air mobility, infrastructure systems,

crisis management, transportation economics, and travel behavior. In these areas, he has

published over 100 papers, books/book chapters, and reports. He is Associate Editor (and

founding Editorial Board Member) of Elsevier Science’s journal Analytic Methods in Accident

Research, Associate Editor of the ASCE Journal of Infrastructure Systems and of the journal

Frontiers in Built Environment, Transportation and Transit Systems (Nature Publishing Group),

Advisory Editor of the International Journal of Critical Illness and Injury Science, and Editorial

Board Member of Elsevier Science’s journal Accident Analysis and Prevention. He is also the

Chair of the Transportation Research Board ABJ80 Statistical Methods Committee, and

Vice Chair of the ASCE T&DI Transportation Economics and Finance Committee. He has

been acknowledged as a Web-of-Science Highly Cited Researcher (2019), has received

the Outstanding Reviewer award for the ASCE Journals of Infrastructure Systems and

Transportation Engineering, and his project on improvements of safety at high-speed rural

intersections was selected as a high value research project by the American Association

of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO).