Analysis of Trends in Data on Transit Bus Dwell Times

Author(s):  
Isaac K. Isukapati ◽  
Hana Rudová ◽  
Gregory J. Barlow ◽  
Stephen F. Smith

Transit vehicles create special challenges for urban traffic signal control. Signal timing plans are typically designed for the flow of passenger vehicles, but transit vehicles—with frequent stops and uncertain dwell times—may have different flow patterns that fail to match those plans. Transit vehicles stopping on urban streets can also restrict or block other traffic on the road. This situation results in increased overall wait times and delays throughout the system for transit vehicles and other traffic. Transit signal priority (TSP) systems are often used to mitigate some of these issues, primarily by addressing delay to the transit vehicles. However, existing TSP strategies give unconditional priority to transit vehicles, exacerbating quality of service for other modes. In networks for which transit vehicles have significant effects on traffic congestion, particularly urban areas, the use of more-realistic models of transit behavior in adaptive traffic signal control could reduce delay for all modes. Estimating the arrival time of a transit vehicle at an intersection requires an accurate model of dwell times at transit stops. As a first step toward developing a model for predicting bus arrival times, this paper analyzes trends in automatic vehicle location data collected over 2 years and allows several inferences to be drawn about the statistical nature of dwell times, particularly for use in real-time control and TSP. On the basis of this trend analysis, the authors argue that an effective predictive dwell time distribution model must treat independent variables as random or stochastic regressors.

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-236
Author(s):  
Songhang Chen ◽  
Dan Zhang ◽  
Fenghua Zhu

Regional Traffic Signal Control (RTSC) is believed to be a promising approach to alleviate urban traffic congestion. However, the current ecology of RTSC platforms is too closed to meet the needs of urban development, which has also seriously affected their own development. Therefore, the paper proposes virtualizing the traffic signal control devices to create software-defined RTSC systems, which can provide a better innovation platform for coordinated control of urban transportation. The novel architecture for RTSC is presented in detail, and microscopic traffic simulation experiments are designed and conducted to verify the feasibility.


Machines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 280
Author(s):  
Yanjun Shi ◽  
Yuhan Qi ◽  
Lingling Lv ◽  
Donglin Liang

Nowadays, traffic congestion has become a significant challenge in urban areas and densely populated cities. Real-time traffic signal control is an effective method to reduce traffic jams. This paper proposes a particle swarm optimisation with linearly decreasing weight (LDW-PSO) to tackle the signal intersection control problem, where a finite-interval model and an objective function are built to minimise spoilage time. The performance was evaluated in real-time simulation imitating a crowded intersection in Dalian city (in China) via the SUMO traffic simulator. The simulation results showed that the LDW-PSO outperformed the classical algorithms in this research, where queue length can be reduced by up to 20.4% and average waiting time can be reduced by up to 17.9%.


2014 ◽  
Vol 651-653 ◽  
pp. 486-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xue Bo Yan

To ease the traffic pressure on urban traffic signal control strategy research started. Dynamic change prediction analysis of traffic flow through the flow of information as a basis for fuzzy reasoning, automatically adjust the signal cycle, green ratio and phase control parameters, real-time signal timing to generate optimal solutions for optimal control effect. The results show that this method can effectively alleviate traffic congestion, meet the design expectations.


2014 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 5067-5072 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronny Kutadinata ◽  
Will Moase ◽  
Chris Manzie ◽  
Lele Zhang ◽  
Tim Garoni

2016 ◽  
Vol 822 ◽  
pp. 455-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucian Matei ◽  
Ilie Dumitru ◽  
Laurențiu Racilă ◽  
Matei Vînatoru

Adaptive traffic signal control is the process by which the timing of a traffic signal is continuously adjusted based on the changing arrival patterns of vehicles at an intersection, usually with the goal of optimizing a given measure of effectiveness. In this paper a traffic signal program is developed in which the characteristics of a traffic signal cycle are optimized at the conclusion of every phase based on the arrival times of vehicles to an intersection, using stopped delay as the measure of effectiveness. The methodology which leads to the signal plan is shown to provide improvement in performance for a number of intersection configurations and traffic regimes over traditional forms of traffic signal control.


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