The present invention relates generally to intelligent traffic management, and more specifically to identifying impact of traffic incident on a road network.
The impact areas and incident duration of traffic incidents have been estimated in the past on the basis of manual observation of the number of vehicles and injuries involved, or using automated means, identifying the impact area as it pertains to the particular network segment on which the incident occurred.
Another known method of estimation of temporal impact of traffic incidents involves merely subtracting the time stamps appearing on police reports at the beginning and the end of the traffic incident.
The subject matter regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the concluding portion of the specification. The features, method of operation, primary components, and advantages of the present traffic management system may best be understood by reference to the following detailed description and accompanying drawings in which:
In the following detailed description, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without the particular details set forth in the specification for the purposes of clarifying the development. Furthermore, it should be appreciated that well-known methods, procedures, and components have not been described in detail to avoid obscuring the non-limiting description of the intelligent traffic management system.
Following is a description of an example of an intelligent traffic management system configured to estimate spatial-temporal-impact regions of a road network resulting from a traffic incident, as noted above.
Generally speaking, examples of the system include data-capture devices linked to a computerized processing unit and are configured to capture traffic data. The traffic data is then used to establish threshold traffic-flow velocities indicative of recurrent traffic-flow velocities associated with incident-free traffic. These threshold velocities are then used as a baseline for identifying non-recurrent traffic-flow velocities indicative of traffic congestion resulting from a traffic incident, according to examples
Quantifying overall traffic-flow velocity for traffic is a complex process because traffic typically contains a diverse of number of vehicles traveling at various speeds changing with time and road conditions.
In more specific terms, the present examples of the system for identifying impact of a traffic incident on a road network may capture traffic data relating to individual vehicles by way of data-capture devices at data-capture times and render the traffic data into traffic-flow velocities representing the overall traffic-flow velocity at a specific data capture location and time, according to examples. The traffic-flow velocity may be derived from traffic data captured by data-capture devices configured to capture traffic data such as, inter alia, the number of vehicles passing a data capture location during a known time period, a flow occupancy (i.e. the fraction of the highway capacity filled with vehicles), or vehicular velocity.
The spatial-temporal-impact region is a dynamic region and may be defined by congested, contiguous sections of a road network. A congested state may be a condition in which the traffic-flow velocity determined from traffic data obtained at a specific data-capture device at a data capture-location and data-capture time is less than a threshold velocity associated with the same-data capture location and capture time, according to examples. The threshold velocity for each data-capture device and data-capture time may be defined as a recurrent traffic-flow velocity determined from traffic data obtained during a dedicated training period, according to examples.
Temporal expressions of impact may be measured in terms incident duration or incident delay, according to examples. Incident duration of the impact time may be measured from the reported time of the traffic incident to the time at which the traffic-flow velocities of the affected road network return to recurrent conditions. Incident delay may be calculated as a cumulative delay of all drivers affected by the incident, as will be further discussed.
Additional definitions to be used throughout the document are as follows:
wherein,
Turning now to the figures,
Computing system 40 includes at least one processor 50 and output interface 45, according to examples. Stationary data-capture devices may include, for example, induction-loop sensors, cameras, radar units and mobile data-capture devices. Such mobile devices may include, for example, location-tracked mobile units 37 wirelessly linked to computing system 40 as shown in vehicle 32 involved in traffic incident 30.
In some examples, may be configured to capture the number of vehicles passing by at a particular time or to capture vehicular speed depending on the type of data-capture device. Computing system 40 may include an output interface 45 configured to display, transfer, or transmit traffic incident information either wirelessly or by way of a hard wire to relevant parties.
A non-limiting example of calculating threshold speed from preliminary traffic-flow data captured during a training period at road location “i” at time “t”, hereinafter referred to as v*(i, t), is hereinafter detailed.
Threshold speed, v*(i, t) may be computed from incident-free conditions at a particular location “i” and time “t” and may be computed separately for each weekday and weekends with the assumption that v*(i, t) is periodic with a periodicity of a day, and each weekday and weekend days follow distinct and different patterns, according to examples. Thus, each detector “i” may have 288 weekday threshold values (e.g. based on 5 minute slots for 24 hours) and an equal number of threshold speed values for the weekend.
Time histories for each detector may be annotated to mark windows of time of incident-induced congestion to facilitate calculation of incident free behavior, i.e. recurrent velocities. Initially, all detectors may be marked as incident-free at all times of the day. From this starting point, the definition of “incident free” is iteratively updated to converge to v* values. The model for threshold speeds may be trained over training period of “k” days. The training process involves iterating over the “k” days from j=1 . . . m times. The v*(i, t) after iteration” are denoted vj*(i, t).
The threshold traffic-flow velocity, v*(i, t) may then be calculated as the traffic-flow velocity for each detector location at a particular time from traffic data captured on incident free days using the formula for calculating the flow-averaged velocities noted above.
Examples of the intelligent transportation management system include provisions for identifying an incident location from police logs or weather reports inputted into an information provider linked to the system 5. The log may be parsed to ascertain the incident location and then mapped to the closest upstream sensor on a directed graph where upstream is defined as the opposite direction of traffic flow because the impact of an incident typically spreads upstream, i.e. there is a back-up behind an incident.
A non-limiting example of identifying the spatial-temporal impact region is hereinafter detailed in the flowchart of
In step 210, the system for identifying the spatial-temporal impact region may determine traffic-flow velocities at locations “i” upstream from the incident corresponding to data-capture devices 15, 20, and 35 of
In step 215, the system for identifying the spatial-temporal region may evaluate if the current traffic-flow velocity at the data-capture device located immediately upstream from the incident is less than the corresponding recurrent traffic-flow velocity for that specific data-capture device and data-capture time. A traffic-flow velocity less than the recurrent traffic-flow velocity indicates the spatial-temporal impact area has expanded to this data-capture location. Processing continues to step 220 where the system again collects traffic data at the next, data-capture device immediately upstream and determines traffic-flow velocity. The system reiterates the evaluation of step 215 and if the traffic-flow velocity is found to be indicative of congestion at that data-capture time, the system continues to check traffic flow conditions at the next upstream data-capture device as shown in step 220.
When the traffic-flow velocity at a data-capture device exceeds the corresponding recurrent traffic-flow velocity for the corresponding data capture time, processing proceeds to step 225, where the system evaluates if the traffic-flow velocity of the previous data-capture time, (i.e. at previous time step “t-1”) was less than the corresponding recurrent traffic-flow velocity. If so, this data-capture device is also added to the set of data-capture devices enclosed in the spatial-temporal impact region and the system continues to obtain traffic data at the immediately upstream data-capture device as noted in step 220.
When the evaluation of step 225 indicates that the traffic-flow velocity of the previous time step was also equal to or exceeds the corresponding recurrent traffic-flow velocity, the boundary of the spatial-temporal impact region has been identified and the system terminates its search for additional data-capture devices and displays the identified region as noted in step 230, in either numerical or graphical form. It should be appreciated that certain examples of the system for identifying spatial-temporal impact regions display the identified impact region prior to identifying the boundary.
The following equation identifies a contiguous spatial-temporal impact region A′ defined by the set of sensors, “St” at time step “t” of data-capture devices “u” at location “i” and time “t” or, u((i, t):
St={u(i, t)}|v(i, t)<v*(i, t)∃e(k, i):k∈(St∪(S t−1)}
wherein “e” is the road segment between locations “k” and “i” and location “k” is immediately upstream from sensor at location “i”.
The set of all data capture devices defining the spatial-temporal impact region may be described by:
S={{u(i, t)}|v(i, t)<v*(i, t)v(i,t−1)<v*(i, t−1)u(i,t−1) is in St−1, for t≧1}+S0
wherein S0 is the set including only the first upstream data-capture device from the traffic incident.
After determining the velocity at each data-capture device enclosed by the spatial-temporal impact region, examples of the system for identifying spatial-temporal impact region provide different metrics for temporal impact; such as incident delay and duration. As noted above, incident delay refers to a cumulative delay of all affected drivers. Incident delay is especially useful for calculating economic loss resulting from an a traffic incident and may be estimated by multiplying the incident delay by a monetary value per time basis.
The incident delay itself may be estimated according to the following relationship of Dinc:
wherein, Dinc is the “incident delay” emanating from the traffic incident. This delay type and other types of delay such as “remaining delay”, Drem, and “recurrent delay”, Drec are measures of cumulative delays of all affected drivers. Drem, refers to delays that cannot be accounted for by either the incident delays or the remaining delay.
Furthermore, refers to segment length beginning at location “i”;
qi (t) refers to a vehicular flow-rate at time “t”;
v(i, t) refers an traffic-flow velocity calculated as an averaged flow velocity derived from measurements at location “i” at time “t” as noted above.
v*(i, t) refers to a threshold traffic-flow velocity at location “i” at time “t”;
A′ refers to a spatial extent of the traffic incident;
T′ refers to the temporal impact of the traffic incident, and
vref refers to a reference speed from which the delays are calculated. As noted above, the time exceeding the time required to travel a road segment at a reference speed is considered a delay. In non-limiting examples 60 mph. is chosen as the reference speed from which delays are measured..
The time delay is the time exceeding the time needed to travel a road segment when traveling at the reference speed.
A second measure of the temporal extent of a traffic incident is defined as the time period beginning from the time of the incident to the time at which traffic flow returns to recurrent flow conditions.
The incident duration may be calculated by tracking the time at which traffic-velocity flow at the data-capture devices bounding the spatial-temporal data flow return to recurrent velocities. The difference between the time at which this condition is met and the original reported incident time defines the incident duration, according to examples.
Computing system 50 of
These temporal metrics may then be displayed or transmitted to a central location by way of output device 45 of
It will be appreciated that for simplicity and clarity of illustration, elements shown in the figures have not necessarily been drawn to scale and reference numerals may be repeated in different figures to indicate corresponding or analogous elements.