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Traffic congestion

About: Traffic congestion is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 16826 publications have been published within this topic receiving 235654 citations. The topic is also known as: traffic jam & traffic snarl-up.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examines an agent- based approach and its applications in different modes of transportation, including roadway, railway, and air transportation, and addresses some critical issues in developing agent-based traffic control and management systems, such as interoperability, flexibility, and extendibility.
Abstract: The agent computing paradigm is rapidly emerging as one of the powerful technologies for the development of large-scale distributed systems to deal with the uncertainty in a dynamic environment. The domain of traffic and transportation systems is well suited for an agent-based approach because transportation systems are usually geographically distributed in dynamic changing environments. Our literature survey shows that the techniques and methods resulting from the field of agent and multiagent systems have been applied to many aspects of traffic and transportation systems, including modeling and simulation, dynamic routing and congestion management, and intelligent traffic control. This paper examines an agent-based approach and its applications in different modes of transportation, including roadway, railway, and air transportation. This paper also addresses some critical issues in developing agent-based traffic control and management systems, such as interoperability, flexibility, and extendibility. Finally, several future research directions toward the successful deployment of agent technology in traffic and transportation systems are discussed.

590 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
19 Jul 2004
TL;DR: This paper proposes a reservation-based system for alleviating traffic congestion, specifically at intersections, and under the assumption that the cars are controlled by agents, and specifies a precise metric for evaluating the quality of traffic control at an intersection.
Abstract: Traffic congestion is one of the leading causes of lost productivity and decreased standard of living in urban settings. Recent advances in artificial intelligence suggest vehicle navigation by autonomous agents will be possible in the near future. In this paper, we propose a reservation-based system for alleviating traffic congestion, specifically at intersections, and under the assumption that the cars are controlled by agents. First, we describe a custom simulator that we have created to measure the different delays associated with conducting traffic through an intersection. Second, we specify a precise metric for evaluating the quality of traffic control at an intersection. Using this simulator and this metric, we show that our reservation-based system can perform two to three hundred times better than traffic lights. As a result, it can smoothly handle much heavier traffic conditions. We show that our system very closely approximates an overpass, which is the optimal solution for the problem with which we are dealing.

590 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the state-of-the-art computer vision for traffic video with a critical analysis and an outlook to future research directions is presented.
Abstract: Automatic video analysis from urban surveillance cameras is a fast-emerging field based on computer vision techniques. We present here a comprehensive review of the state-of-the-art computer vision for traffic video with a critical analysis and an outlook to future research directions. This field is of increasing relevance for intelligent transport systems (ITSs). The decreasing hardware cost and, therefore, the increasing deployment of cameras have opened a wide application field for video analytics. Several monitoring objectives such as congestion, traffic rule violation, and vehicle interaction can be targeted using cameras that were typically originally installed for human operators. Systems for the detection and classification of vehicles on highways have successfully been using classical visual surveillance techniques such as background estimation and motion tracking for some time. The urban domain is more challenging with respect to traffic density, lower camera angles that lead to a high degree of occlusion, and the variety of road users. Methods from object categorization and 3-D modeling have inspired more advanced techniques to tackle these challenges. There is no commonly used data set or benchmark challenge, which makes the direct comparison of the proposed algorithms difficult. In addition, evaluation under challenging weather conditions (e.g., rain, fog, and darkness) would be desirable but is rarely performed. Future work should be directed toward robust combined detectors and classifiers for all road users, with a focus on realistic conditions during evaluation.

579 citations

Book
01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of recent research on the subject of peak-hour traffic congestion by transportation experts and land-use planners and examine the advantages and disadvantages of the principal strategies being proposed to reduce traffic congestion.
Abstract: This book provides an overview of recent research on the subject of peak-hour traffic congestion by transportation experts and land-use planners. It examines the advantages and disadvantages of the principal strategies being proposed to reduce traffic congestion. The discussion focuses on three questions: Why has traffic congestion become worse? What remedies might reduce it? Which remedies would be most effective? To answer these questions, the author examines the effects of congestion on the allocation of scarce resources, the relationship between land use and traffic flows in rapidly growing areas, and the benefits of regional solutions over purely local ones. The book is organized in five parts: (1) The Basic Situation; (2) Supply-Side Remedies; (3) Demand-Side Remedies That Do Not Change Housing or Job Locations; (4) Demand-Side Remedies That Change Housing or Job Locations; and (5) Conclusions. An Index is provided.

577 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the ACC vehicles improve the traffic stability and the dynamic road capacity, and traffic congestion in the reference scenario was completely eliminated when simulating a proportion of 25% ACC vehicles.
Abstract: We present an adaptive cruise control (ACC) strategy where the acceleration characteristics, that is, the driving style automatically adapts to different traffic situations. The three components of the concept are the ACC itself, implemented in the form of a car-following model, an algorithm for the automatic real-time detection of the traffic situation based on local information, and a strategy matrix to adapt the driving characteristics (that is, the parameters of the ACC controller) to the traffic conditions. Optionally, inter-vehicle and infrastructure-to-car communication can be used to improve the accuracy of determining the traffic states. Within a microscopic simulation framework, we have simulated the complete concept on a road section with an on-ramp bottleneck, using empirical loop-detector data for an afternoon rush-hour as input for the upstream boundary. We found that the ACC vehicles improve the traffic stability and the dynamic road capacity. While traffic congestion in the reference scenario was completely eliminated when simulating a proportion of 25% ACC vehicles, travel times were already significantly reduced for much lower penetration rates. The efficiency of the proposed driving strategy even for low market penetrations is a promising result for a successful application in future driver assistance systems.

546 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023447
2022943
2021989
20201,081
20191,067
2018987