Documents
Methods of detecting newly opened roads using probe car data
It is desirable that newly open roads should be updated to the digital map of the navigation
system as soon as they are opened.
In Japan, new expressways and national roads are updated to the digital map relatively
quickly, because the road administrator makes this information easily accessible to map
suppliers. On the other hand, newly opened local road information is not very accessible to
the map suppliers, thus newly opened local roads are only added to the digital map after a
survey every few years.
When new roads open, cars will drive on them. We believe we can detect a newly opened
road by analyzing probe car’s location data. This paper describes the method and algorithm
used to achieve this.
ITS R&D Department, Denso Corporation
Presented at the 12th World Congress on Intelligent Transport Systems, November 6-10, 2005, San Francisco, California
Tehran Traffic Congestion Charging Management: A Success Story
Tehran- the capital of Iran- is the largest city of the country with more than 8 million people residents, 600 square kilometers wide, it serves more than 4 million vehicles and 4 million motorcycles as well, over a large scattered road network consisting of 4 active metro ways and 5 active bus rapid transit lanes. Nevertheless, deficiency of transportation systems in Tehran has been led to achieve the first place in the world in air and noise pollution. At 1980, Tehran municipality lined a border around the city center, and defined a traffic congested area through which any entry for the vehicles since then needs permission. Although such permission is only granted to a very small group of people like physicians, there was still a great trespassing rate due to the insufficient capability of control. Till the past year, all the entry roads to the restricted zone were controlled by police officers. There are as much as 5 million vehicles passing the borders monthly of which 20 percent or 1.1 million is illegal. Thus, efficient controlling is a major need, and if systemized, it can deliver vital information of traffic data. Since the past year, Tehran traffic Control Company, implemented an automated control of the borders, using 103 high res. Cameras, which contributed to detect more than 80 percent of illegal entries, and has become a very useful tool to collect traffic data for further analysis. This paper discusses this success story.
Keywords: Tehran traffic problems, congestion charging, congestion pricing
2011 World Congress, Orlando, Tehran Traffic Control Company
Integrated Corridor Management Program
One contribution of the USDOT Integrated Corridor Management (ICM) Program has been the definition of a set of key national corridor performance measures consistently applied across multiple ICM sites. These measures represent both the bottom-line for ICM strategy cost-benefit evaluation and have been instrumental in supporting a discussion of how ICM impacts can be best characterized among key corridor stakeholders. Initially, the discussion on performance-driven corridor management among the participating ICM Pioneer Sites has been focused on measures derived from observed data. In the Analysis, Modeling and Simulation (AMS) phase of the effort (2009-10), however, attention turned to producing comparable measures derived from the outputs of different traffic simulation tools. This paper documents the algorithmic process developed in the ICM program and used to calculate key national measures of corridor performance.
Fellow, Transportation Analysis, Noblis
Presented at the 18th World Congress on ITS, October 2011, Orlando, Florida
SMART- Signal Deployment in Pasadena, CA - Travel Time Information and Arterial Performance Measures
This paper describes the deployment of the Smart-SIGNAL technology in the City of
Pasadena, CA – collecting and archiving event-based traffic signal data simultaneously at
several intersections along one major arterial corridor. Smart-SIGNAL generates timedependent
performance measures for both individual intersections and arterials including
intersection queue length and arterial travel time. The paper describes lessons learnt during
the deployment and focuses on the analysis of the resultant information, and its value for
traffic operations as well for the traveling public.
Author: Michael Wieck
Presented at the 18th World Congress on ITS, October 2011, Orlando, Florida
Design Build of Intelligent Transportation Systems for Northern Michigan
The Michigan Department of Transportation decided on a design-build delivery system to expedite the installation of intelligent transportation systems to serve rural traveler needs in northern Michigan. The technologies installed were dynamic message signs and environmental sensor stations. This delivery system provided the design-builder with several design issues to be address, and lessons learned from this process will help other government agencies to use this delivery system to expedite deployment of intelligent transportation systems in rural areas.
Hubbell, Roth & Cark, Inc
Presented at the 18th World Congress on ITS, October 2011, Orlando, Florida