Download Free National Transportation Strategic Research Plan Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online National Transportation Strategic Research Plan and write the review.

The NSTC's National Transportation Science and Technology Strategy, issued in April 1997, has four key elements: Strategic Planning and Assessment, Partnership Initiatives, Enabling Research, and Education and Training. This Transportation Strategic Research Plan addresses the Enabling Research element. It incorporates R & D activities with clear potential relevance to one or more transportation modes or functions, regardless of the objectives for which it is conducted or the performing agency. Enabling research includes activities described under three Federal budget categories. For civil agencies, these are Basic Research, Applied Research, and Development. The comparable Defense Department terms are 6.1 (Basic Research), 6.2 (Applied Research), and 6.3 (Advanced Technology Demonstration).
This is one of two implementation documents for the National Transportation Science and Technology Strategy. It deals with the areas of basic or enabling research which are necessary to provide the technological foundation for new and improved transportation systems. The Plan considers the roles of a broad range of parties involved in the transportation enterprise: Federal government agencies; State, local and tribal agencies; academic institutions, and the private sector. It focuses on seven areas of enabling research: human performance and behavior; advanced materials and structures; computer, information, communication systems; energy, propulsion, and environmental engineering; sensing and measurement; analysis, modeling, design and construction tools; and social and economic policy issues.
The National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) Committee on Technology, Subcommittee on Transportation Research and Development (R & D), has created a National Transportation Science and Technology Strategy that builds on the earlier strategy published in 1997. Like its predecessor, the National Strategy is intended to help Congress and the Administration establish national transportation R & D priorities and coordinated research activities. The National Strategy articulates goals for transportation system safety, mobility and access, economic growth, the environment and national security. It proposes the broader involvement of state, local and tribal agencies; academic institutions; and private industry in national transportation R & D strategic planning and system assessment, private-public technology partnerships, enabling research and transportation education and training.