Stephen Mattingly
- Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Texas at Arlington
Dr. Mattingly joined the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA) in September 2002. Prior to joining UTA he served on the faculty at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks (UAF) for two and a half years, and also served as a lecturer at the University of Southern California. While at UAF, Dr. Mattingly helped found the FAA Air Transportation Centers of Excellence Program: Center for General Aviation Research. He teaches undergraduate courses in transportation engineering and transportation planning as well as graduate courses in analytical models in transportation, system evaluation and decision making, transportation network analysis, transportation planning and bicycle and pedestrian facility planning and design.
In 2013, he joined in a consortium that formed the Transportation Research Center for Livable Communities through the USDOT University Transportation Centers Program. In 2016, he led UTAs participation in the National Institute for Transportation and Communities, a national center funded through the USDOT University Transportation Centers Program and led civil engineering's participation in UTA's Center for Transportation Equity Decisions and Dollars, a tier I center funded through the USDOT University Transportation Centers Program.
Dr. Mattingly's areas of research include a wide variety of projects. The state-funded research projects include work on evaluating existing highway right-of-way for accommodating high-speed passenger rail, evaluating over height detection devices, app-based crowd sourcing of bicycle and pedestrian conflict data, incorporating resilience considerations in transportation asset management planning and project selection process, managed lane pricing and weaving, institutional approaches for interjurisdictional system management and detection and mitigation of roadway hazards for bicyclists. The federally-funded projects include: developing public health performance measures for transportation infrastructure, engineering sustainable engineers, evaluation of the Anaheim advanced traffic control system field operational test (SCOOT performance and assessment of institutional issues), practices to promote equity in transportation funding, impacts of the Northridge Earthquake on traffic network performance, and determining the safety impact an end-around taxiway.
Experience- –present Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Texas at Arlington
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