Roads/Highways

Effectiveness of Adaptive Traffic Control for Arterial Signal Management: Modeling Results

Skabardonis, Alexander
Gomes, Gabriel
2010

This study identifies and selects the most promising existing adaptive control algorithms for arterial streets, evaluates performance through simulation, and develops a plan for field testing of the most promising algorithms on a real-world arterial. A section of Highway 1 in the city of Lomita, California was selected as the test site for evaluation of adaptive signal control strategies. A methodology was developed to obtain a time-varying origin-destination (OD) matrix from the system loop detector data at the test site. The calibrated OD matrix was applied to a microscopic...

San Diego I-15 Integrated Corridor Management (ICM) System: Phase I

Miller, Mark
Novick, Linda
Li, Yuwei
Skabardonis, Alex
2008

This report describes the Stage One work of the US Department of Transportation’s (DOT) federally-sponsored Integrated Corridor Management (ICM) Program for the I-15 Corridor in San Diego County, California, between State Route 52 in the city of San Diego and State Route 78 in the city of Escondido. The development work is based on the systems engineering process whereby this work focused specifically on the concept of operations and the system requirements specifications. The development of the concept of operations consists of the following elements: vision, goals and objectives for the...

Roadway Powered Electric Vehicle Project Parametric Studies: Phase 3D Final Report

Systems Control Technology
1996

This study looked at the application of electrification and automation to freeways in the Los Angeles region. The report is broken down into the following sections: Development and Enhancement of Analysis Tools, Inductive Coupling System Design, Value Engineering of Roadway Cores, and Economic Analysis of Roadway Powered Electric Vehicle (RPEV) Technology.

Section-Related Measures of Traffic System Performance: Prototype Field Implementation

Ritchie, Stephen G.
Sun, Carlos
Oh, Seri
Oh, Cheol
2001

In this project (MOU 336),an initial phase of a field implementation was accomplished of the results of a previous research project (MOU 224),in which a vehicle reidentification algorithm based on loop signature analysis was developed using freeway traffic data.This algorithm was extended to non-freeway cases, initially using a section of 2-lane major arterial in cooperation with the City of Irvine,California.The technique was enhanced to address problems such as "irregularities " in vehicle signatures associated with trucks,tail-gating vehicles and erroneous counting of vehicles,with the...

Dynamic Origin/Destination Estimation Using True Section Densities

Sun, Carlos
Porwal, Himanshu
2000

This final report presents a practical approach for dynamic origin/destination demandestimation. The proposed dynamic origin/destination estimation framework addressesmany of the shortcomings of the existing formulations and presents a formulation forgeneral networks and not just corridors. One unique feature of this framework is its useof section density as a variable instead of flow. The framework is built upon thefoundation of static origin/destination matrix estimation by adding the temporal aspect.Two traffic assignment models, namely DYNASMART and DTA are used for assigningdynamic...

Integrated Roadway/Adaptive Cruise Control System: Safety, Performance, Environmental and Near Term Deployment Considerations

Ioannou, Petros
Wang, Yun
Chang, Hwan
2007

In this project, we present the design, analysis and performance evaluation of the Integrated Roadway/Adaptive Cruise Control System (IRAC) proposed in Task Order (TO) 4242 and studied further in the continuation of TO4242 under TO5501. The IRAC system is a highway traffic control system which integrates ramp metering strategies and a speed control strategy by taking into account highway to vehicle communication, and adaptive cruise control (ACC) system technologies on board of the vehicles. The IRAC system closes the loop of an almost open loop highway traffic system by controlling both...

Using Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) to Form High-Performance Vehicle Streams. Microscopic Traffic Modeling

Liu, Hao
2018

This document summarizes the microscopic traffic simulation models used in the project entitled Using Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) to Form High-Performance Vehicle Streams. The major components of the microscopic traffic model include the vehicle dispatching model, human driver model and ACC/CACC model. The vehicle dispatching model determines how a modeled vehicle enters the simulation network and the distribution of different types of vehicles across the multi-lane highway. The human driver model and ACC/CACC model specify the car following and lane changing behaviors of...

A Mobile Platform for Roadway Incident Documentation

Su, Ray J.
Chan, Ching-Yao
2004

This report is part of the final report and the deliverables for TR0002, Collision Recording and Documentation, sponsored by California Office of Traffic Safety, and contracted through California Department of Transportation. Roadway incidents, especially collisions, often result in traffic congestion and travel delays, in addition to the direct damage to the vehicles and the injuries to the people involved. The subsequent congestion is mainly caused by stopped vehicles or lane closure, but it is often intensified by slowing vehicles with drivers observing the accident scene. The effects...

National Automated Highway System Consortium: Modeling Stakeholder Preferences Project

Lathrop, John
Chen, Kan
1997

This document is the final report of the Modeling Stakeholder Preferences Project. The results of the project consist of three results: 1) evaluation framework; 2) focus group non-quantitative findings/ recommendations; and, 3) performance/impact measures, their endpoints, rankings and weights, for each stakeholder group.

A Vehicle to Roadside Communications Architecture for ITS Applications

Lo, Tetiana
Varaiya, Pravin
2000

In this report we present a framework to assist Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) providers in the deployment of ITS user services requiring wide-area wireless communi-cations. We examine a scenario in the San Francisco East Bay Area for the 1995 time frame and determine the applicable ITS user services and wide-area wireless messaging requirements. Using the programming language SHIFT we investigate the uplink perfor-mance of a leading wireless candidate, Cellular Digital Packet Data in terms of its ability to support vehicle-to-roadside ITS applications during normal peak-period...