Browsing by Subject "Travelers"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item COVID-19 Implications on Public Transportation: Understanding Post-Pandemic Transportation Needs, Behaviors, and Experiences(Center for Transportation Studies, University of Minnesota, 2022-11) Fan, Yingling; Becker, Andrew; Ryan, Galen; Wolfson, JulianThe COVID-19 pandemic and widespread social distancing measures have dramatically reduced public transit ridership, leaving transit agencies with massive revenue shortfalls, and it is still unclear how long it will take for transit to recover and whether transit will emerge fundamentally transformed for better or worse after the pandemic. This research collected first-hand data on people's post-pandemic travel behavior decision-making process in the Twin Cities metropolitan region between March and June 2021. Participants were recruited through various forms of digital marketing tools such as a website, social media, emails, and online videos. Of the 339 participants who were enrolled in the study, 154 (45%) used a smartphone app to capture daily transportation needs, behaviors, and experiences for two consecutive weeks. The data provided insights into how the COVID-19 pandemic has shaped people?s attitudes, perceptions, and decisions toward various transportation services, including public transportation, and how the mobility impacts of COVID-19 differ by individual socio-demographics and trip environments. Results from this research will help transportation planners identify innovative and sensible ways to effectively promote the use of public transportation in the post-pandemic era.Item Oral history interview with Robert E. Johnston(Charles Babbage Institute, 2013-10-28) Johnston, Robert E.This interview with computer security pioneer Robert Johnston stands out for its documentation of early efforts to implement computer security systems and policies within corporations. Specifically it details his leadership with computer security in the insurance industry (at Travelers, The Hartford, and Phoenix Mutual) in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as his role as workshops chair for the Computer Security Institute, an important, independent, user-focused organization for inter-firm sharing of information and knowledge on computer security. He also discusses a secure facility (unprecedented within industry) he designed and oversaw that was used in discovery with the IBM-Fujitsu legal battle, and professionalization issues in the computer security field. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 1116862, “Building an Infrastructure for Computer Security History.”