Levinson, David MXie, Feng2016-07-132016-07-132016-07-13https://hdl.handle.net/11299/181336The networks used in Figure 5 (Xie and Levinson (2007) Measuring the Structure of Road Networks) are in 16 simple ASCII node and link tables. The 12 derived network structures are obtained by using a simulation model called the degeneration model (Xie and Levinson (2008) The weakest link: The decline of the surface transportation network). The simulator are written in Java and named "SOUND – System for Ultraconnected Network Degeneration" (Xie and Levinson (2016).Fig. 5 displays four base networks , 15 x 15 90° network (A0), 15 x 15 45° network (B0), and 15 x 15 30° network (C0), and 4 x 4 complete network (D0), as well as 12 network structures derived from them (three for each). As can be seen, links have been specified as five different hierarchies [1-5]. The boldness and grayness of a link indicates its hierarchy level and a bolder and darker link represents a road of a higher hierarchy. This study examines these 16 networks with proposed structural measures. (p 348 of Xie and Levinson (2007) Measuring the Structure of Road Networks)CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/Test NetworkTransportation PlanningTransportation ModelingTest Networks from "Measuring the Structure of Road Networks"Datasethttp://doi.org/10.13020/D6C30V