Marta Gonzalez

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martag
Type
Faculty
Photo
Gonzalez headshot
Headshot (PLEASE IGNORE, USE PHOTO FIELD ABOVE INSTEAD)
Gonzalez headshot
First Name
Marta
Last Name
Gonzalez
Email
martag@berkeley.edu
Office
Wurster 406c
Office Phone
Programs
Systems Engineering
Transportation Engineering
Titles
Associate Professor
Biography

Marta Gonzalez is an Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at UC Berkeley and a Physics Research faculty in the Energy Technology Area (ETA) at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). Gonzalez’s research focuses on urban sciences, with a focus on the intersections of people with the built and the natural environment and their social networks. Her ultimate goal is to design urban solutions and enable caring development in the use of new technologies. Gonzalez has developed new tools that impact transportation research and discovered novel approaches to model human mobility and the adoption of energy technologies. She is a recipient of the prestigious Joseph M Sussman Prize for Frontiers in Built Environment best article award in 2021, the UN Foundation award in support of her research studying the consumption patterns of women in the developing world in 2016, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation award to study access to financial services in the developing world in 2016. In 2023, she was named fellow of the Network Science Society for her seminal contributions to our understanding of human mobility and transportation networks, and for applying network modeling to solve societal problems in urban systems.

Education

Ph.D., Physics, Stuttgart Universität, Germany, 2006

M.Sc., Physics, Central University of Venezuela, Venezuela, 2001

B.Sc., Physics, Simon Bolivar University, Venezuela, 1999

Research Interests
Urban sciences, Built and natural environment, Human mobility, Energy Technologies, Statistical Physics of Complex Systems & Network Science
Research

Gonzalez’s research focuses on the statistical physics of complex systems and network Science spatial AI, digital traces, and environmental data. Her research team develops computer models to analyze digital traces of information mediated by devices. They process this information to manage the demand in urban infrastructures in relation to energy and mobility. Gonzalez’s recent research uses billions of mobile phone records to understand the appearance of traffic jams and the integration of electric vehicles into the grid, smart meter data records to compare the policy of solar energy adoption, and card transactions to identify habits in spending behavior. Here are a few of the research projects Gonzalez is currently working on below:

  • Risk Assessment of Wildfires - Gonzalez’s research team aims to develop a comprehensive wildfire protection system that guards against current and future catastrophic disasters where critical infrastructure is destroyed and lives are lost. They accomplish this not by responding to emergencies but by supporting strategic planning and policy development where the focus is on reducing the intensity and rate of spread of a wildfire. If this goal is achieved, first responders can safely contain ignitions, minimize damage to infrastructure, and hopefully save lives. Gonzalez’s research proposes to explore the urban edge landscape and infrastructure (often referred to as the wildland-urban interface – WUI) to better identify and model the risk of catastrophic wildfires so that more informed planning and policy decisions can be made to inform improved and enhanced design, management and mitigation efforts under current and future climate conditions. Simply put, this research will enhance both energy and climate security against wildfires. 
  • NICE: Networked Infrastructures under Compound Extremes - As climate change continues and technology advances, facilities around the world face ever-increasing threats from natural hazards, cyber-attacks, etc. The interconnectivity of systems has the potential to exacerbate resultant system failures. When one system fails, any system which depends on it also fails, producing a cascade effect from one network to the next. Such events have been observed in the power grid and other interdependent infrastructure networks amplifying blackouts. Furthermore, the possibility of compound events, like malicious actors launching a cyber-attack during a natural disaster, magnifies the risk to already stressed networks. To mitigate this risk, Gonzalez’s research group is developing new computationally tractable theoretical frameworks and methods to help ensure installation-level resilience. They are implementing Multiplex Network Science (MNS) to capture the structural properties of the internal network and Multiscale System Dynamics (MSD) to investigate the infrastructure response to compound extremes. In particular, her research group is focusing on mapping failure and recovery pathways, adapting to changing conditions, and recovering from disruptions.  Upon completion, they aim to have developed an integrated resilience framework informed by a suite of models embedded in proof-of-concept software. 
  • Urban Traffic - This work focuses on traffic congestion and unifies different approaches, perspectives, and fields into a single science of traffic. A century passed the age of the automobile; traffic networks have been described as engines of global growth and prosperity. However, their uninformed expansion is a leading cause of pollution and other negative externalities. The collapse of the traffic network,  i.e., network-wide congestion, causes a loss in social and economic opportunities and increased carbon emissions; however, it is common across cities worldwide. In our endeavor towards greener and more livable cities, a clear understanding of traffic network congestion is necessary to simplify science-informed policy. A unified science of traffic networks facilitates the planning of cities from a social, environmental, and economic perspective. In this work, Gonzalez’s research team addresses these issues by connecting the two perspectives (link and network) for five major cities worldwide: Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco Bay Area in the United States, Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, and Lisbon in Portugal. They begin by modeling the traffic networks through state-of-the-art simulations spanning an extended morning traffic peak to model traffic at the network level into a single actionable framework.
CV File
CV2024.pdf10.91 MB
Awards

 

  • Research paper award in IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems (top research paper between 2010-2019)

 

  • Joseph M Sussman Prize, Frontiers in Built Environment best article award in the Transportation and Transit Systems section, (2021)

 

  • UN Foundation award to study consumption patterns of women and girls in the developing world (2016)

 

  • Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation award to study access to financial services in the developing world (2016)

 

  • Winner of the MIT-Philips Lighting Grand Challenge (w. Post-doc) (2016)

 

  • 1st Prize MIT Big Data Transportation Challenge "Prediction Algorithms" (w. Students) (2013)

 

  • 2nd Prize, MIT Big Data Transportation Challenge "Visualization Platform." (w. Student) (2013)

 

  • Best Paper Award in the ACM SIGKDD International Workshop on Urban Computing, KDD'13, Chicago. (w. Students)
Teaching

Fall: CEE 263H/CYPLAN 257H: Human Mobility and Network Science, elective for the Graduate Data Science Certificate

Spring: CE 88: Data Science for Smart Cities (see our GitHub site), a Data Science Connector Course

Fall: CEE 263N: Scalable Spatial Analysis, elective for the Graduate Data Science Certificate

Fall: CYPLAN 257: Data Science for Human Mobility and Socio-Technical Systems

CYPLAN 290: Urban Systems and Network Science

 

 

 

Publications

Selected publications by year:

  • Ariel Salgado, Yiyi He, John Radke, Auroop Ganguly, and Marta C. González. “Dimension Reduction Approach for Understanding Resource-Flow Resilience to Climate Change", Communication Physics (In Press), (2024). [PDF][Supplementary Materials]

 

  • Xu, Y., Olmos, L.E., Mateo, D., Hernando, A., Yang, X., and Gonzalez, M.C.,  “Urban dynamics through the lens of human mobility”. Nature Computational Science (2023).  [PDF] [SI]

 

  • Lukas Ambuhl, Monica Menendez, and Marta C. Gonzalez, "Understanding congestion propagation by combining percolation theory with the macroscopic fundamental diagram", Communications Physics 6, 1 (2023). [PDF]

 

  • Y He, S Lindbergh, Y Ju, M Gonzalez, and J Radke, "Towards Resilient Critical Infrastructures: Understanding the Impact of Coastal Flooding on the Fuel Transportation Network in the San Francisco Bay", ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 10(9), 573 (2022). [PDF]

 

  • Vlachogiannis, Dimitros and Yanyan Xu and Jin Ling and Marta C. González.  “Correlation networks of air particulate matter (PM2:5): a comparative study” Applied Network Science 6(1) 1-18 (2021). [PDF]

 

  • Xu, Yanyan, Luis E. Olmos, Sofiane Abbar, and Marta C. González. “Deconstructing laws of accessibility and facility distribution in cities.” Science Advances 6, no. 37 (2020): eabb4112. [PDF] [Supplementary Materials]

 

  • Fahad Alhasoun and Marta C. González. “Streetify: Using Street View Imagery And Deep Learning For Urban Streets Development.” 2019 IEEE International Conference on Big Data, Los Angeles, CA. [arXiv:1911.08007]

 

  • Barbour, Edward, Carlos Cerezo Davila, Siddharth Gupta, Christoph Reinhart, Jasleen Kaur, and Marta C. González. “Planning for sustainable cities by estimating building occupancy with mobile phones.” Nature Communications 10, no. 1 (2019): 1-10. [PDF]

 

  • Olmos, Luis E., Serdar Çolak, Sajjad Shafiei, Meead Saberi, and Marta C. González. “Macroscopic dynamics and the collapse of urban traffic.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115, no. 50 (2018): 12654-12661. [PDF]

 

  • Di Clemente, Riccardo, Miguel Luengo-Oroz, Matias Travizano, Sharon Xu, Bapu Vaitla, and Marta C. González. “Sequences of purchases in credit card data reveal lifestyles in urban populations.” Nature Communications 9, no. 1 (2018): 1-8. [PDF]

 

  • Xu, Yanyan, Serdar Çolak, Emre C. Kara, Scott J. Moura, and Marta C. González. “Planning for electric vehicle needs by coupling charging profiles with urban mobility.” Nature Energy 3, no. 6 (2018): 484-493. [PDF]

 

  • Albert, Adrian, Jasleen Kaur, and Marta C. Gonzalez. “Using convolutional networks and satellite imagery to identify patterns in urban environments at a large scale.” In Proceedings of the 23rd ACM SIGKDD international conference on knowledge discovery and data mining, pp. 1357-1366. 2017 [arXiv:1704.02965v2]

 

  • Jiang S., Yang Y., Gupta S., Veneziano D., Athavale S., and Marta C. González. “TimeGeo: A spatiotemporal framework for modeling urban mobility without surveys“, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113, no (37), E5370-E5378 (2016). [PDF]

 

  • Toole J.L., Colak S., Sturt B., Alexandre L., Evsukoff A., and Marta C. González. “The Path Most Travelled: Travel Demand Estimation Using Big Data“, Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies 58, 162-177 (2015). [PDF]

 

  • Toole J.L. , Herrera-Yague C., Schneider C.M., and Marta C. González. “Coupling Human Mobility and Social Ties Social Ties”, Journal of The Royal Society Interface 12(105), 20141128 (2015). [PDF]

 

  • Yang Y., Herrera-Yague C., Eagle N., and Marta C. González. “Limits of Predictability in Commuting Flows in the Absence of Data for Calibration”, Scientific Reports 4, 5662 (2014). [PDF]

 

  • Schneider C.M., Belik V., Couronne T., Smoreda Z., and Marta C. González. “Unravelling Daily Mobility Motifs”, Journal of The Royal Society Interface 10(84), 20130246 (2013). [PDF]

 

  • Toole J.L., Cha M., and Marta C. González. “Modeling the Adoption of Innovations in the Presence of Geographic and Media Influences”, PLoS ONE 7 (1), e29528 (2012). [PDF]

 

  • Jiang S., Ferreira Jr J., and Marta C. González. “Clustering Daily Patterns of Human Activities in the City”, Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery 25, 478-510 (2012). [PDF]

 

  • Simini F., Marta C. González, Maritan A., Barabasi A.-L. “A Universal Model for Mobility and Migration Patterns”, Nature 484 (7392), 96-100 (2012).[PDF]

 

  • Wang P. and Gonzalez M.C., Hidalgo C.A and Barabasi A.-L., “Understanding the Spreading Patterns of Mobile Phone Viruses”, Science 324, 1071-1076 (2009).

 

  • Gonzalez M.C., Hidalgo C.A and Barabasi A.-L. “Understanding Individual Human Mobility Patterns“, Nature 453, 479-482 (2008).