Thanks Elaine--I hope we get to hear more about the tax records work. I
am hoping it is dealing with IRS records and where we say we live and
pay our taxes from. I know that LEHD uses IRS tax records for its
origin (home) locations but that is something that we do not know much
about. Do we live and start our journey to work at the same place we
use for our tax home is one obvious question. We know a lot about QCEW
and worker place data (the other half of LEHD) but we really do not know
anything about the resident side.
Thanks for the update and I apologize for the digression.
On 8/13/2015 3:33 PM, Elaine.Murakami(a)dot.gov wrote:
Hi Krishnan and anyone else who is interested! I had the BEST time at
my one day (Aug 10) at the Joint Statistical Meetings. JSM includes
many organizations including the American Statistical Association
(ASA). 6000 statisticians at the Seattle Convention Center. It is
like TRB for statisticians. J
My presentation was about using aggregate cellphone data and the test
of the RMove Smartphone app in Indiana. Thank you to everyone (Sumit
Bindra, Leta Huntsinger, Xian-Biao Hu, Christina Barrone and Elizabeth
Greene ) whose information I used in my presentation, which was mostly
drawn from the TRB Planning Applications conference and the American
Planning Association conference! I had hoped to talk about the NCHRP
08-95 project on cell phone data, but that project is running 1 year
behind.
CB staff (Amy O’Hara and Alison Fields) did a presentation about using
tax records to examine “mobility.” I missed the presentation because
it was first thing on Monday morning, but Amy will send me a copy of
the presentation. Their research is not yet final.
The session (session 158) on interactive graphics with R was very fun
but I could not stay the entire time. Here are some of the R
library names: (animint) (plotly) (ggplotly) and (gridSVG). One key
person with R code and involved with ASA is Carson Sievert from Iowa
State. WOW! This is where I think we need to be going with big
data mining and analysis.
Transportation Statistics Interest Group (TSIG). (This is an
equivalent of a TRB Task Force before it becomes a full committee).
TSIG will continue as an interest group and may promote up to a
“section” in the future. Alan Karr from RTI is the current chair.
They discussed putting together 2 sessions for next year’s JSM. Feng
Guo VA Tech will lead one effort, and Pat Hu will work on another
(administrative records). Please contact them feng.guo(a)vt.edu
<mailto:feng.guo@vt.edu> patricia.hu(a)dot.gov
<mailto:patricia.hu@dot.gov> if you are interested in being a speaker.
I would have liked to attend these, but since I only had one-day
registration, did not.
Session 516 on Wed. was “utilizing Administrative Records and
Adaptive Design in the 2020 Census”.
Session 541 on Wed – Cynthia Bland Augustine from RTI (member of TRB
ABJ40) discussed “GeoSampling Weights and Design Effects”
Session 593 on Wed – was on using the Census Bureau’s Planning
Database. (see the attachment of the people who presented). I
think this is a potential resource for assisting in regional and
statewide surveys to better estimate low response and plan, in
advance, for different recruitment or sampling design.
Elaine
*From:*ctpp-news-bounces@chrispy.net
[mailto:ctpp-news-bounces@chrispy.net] *On Behalf Of *Krishnan Viswanathan
*Sent:* Thursday, August 13, 2015 12:18 PM
*To:* ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
*Subject:* [CTPP] JSM
Elaine & (others who attended)
Anything interesting from the JSM that pertains to transportation?
Look forward to hearing from take on how it went & what we should look
to in terms of data, methods, etc.
Krishnan
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