Freeway Operations and Traffic Signal Systems, 2004

Freeway Operations and Traffic Signal Systems, 2004
Author: National Research Council (U.S.). Transportation Research Board
Publisher:
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2004
Genre: Electronic traffic controls
ISBN:

TRB?s Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board 1867 examines several algorithms that estimate speed from traffic surveillance cameras in a variety of traffic, weather, and lighting conditions; identify bottleneck locations, the active times, and the delays that are caused; and are applied to the archived loop detector data in the I-4 data warehouse.

RHODES-ITMS Corridor Control Project

RHODES-ITMS Corridor Control Project
Author: Douglas Gettman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1999
Genre: Adaptive control systems
ISBN:

The RHODES-ITMS Corridor Control project addresses real-time control of ramp meters of a freeway segment, with consideration of the traffic volumes entering and leaving the freeway from/to arterials, and the regulation of these volumes via real-time setting of ramp metering rates.

Computer Science and Applications

Computer Science and Applications
Author: Ally Hu
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 568
Release: 2015-06-11
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1315684985

The 2014 Asia-Pacific Conference on Computer Science and Applications was held in Shanghai, December 27-28, 2014. These CSAC-2014 proceedings include 105 selected papers, which focus not only on the research of science and technology of computer sciences, but also on the research of applications, aiming at a quick and immediate effect on

Handbook of Transportation Science

Handbook of Transportation Science
Author: Randolph Hall
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 534
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1461552036

Over the past thirty-five years, a tremendous body of both theoretical and empirical research has been established on the `science of transportation'. The Handbook of Transportation Science has collected and synthesized this research into a systematic treatment of this field covering its fundamental concepts, methods, and principles. The purpose of this handbook is to define transportation as a scientific discipline that transcends transportation technology and methods. Whether by car, truck, airplane - or by a mode of transportation that has not yet been conceived - transportation obeys fundamental properties. The science of transportation defines these properties, and demonstrates how our knowledge of one mode of transportation can be used to explain the behavior of another. Transportation scientists are motivated by the desire to explain spatial interactions that result in movement of people or objects from place to place. Its methodologies draw from physics, operations research, probability and control theory. It is fundamentally a quantitative discipline, relying on mathematical models and optimization algorithms to explain the phenomena of transportation. The fourteen chapters in the handbook are written by the leading researchers in transportation science in an effort to define and categorize for the first time the scientific nature and state of the art of the field. As such, it is directed to the broader research community, transportation practitioners, and future transportation scientists.

Automated Highway Systems

Automated Highway Systems
Author: Petros Ioannou
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 366
Release: 2013-04-17
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1475745737

Experts address some of the main issues and uncertainties associated with the design and deployment of Automated Highway Systems (AHS). They discuss new AHS concepts, technology, and benefits, as well as institutional, environmental, and social issues - concerns that will affect dramatically the operation of the current highway system from both the vehicle and infrastructure points of view.

Intelligent Monitoring, Control, and Security of Critical Infrastructure Systems

Intelligent Monitoring, Control, and Security of Critical Infrastructure Systems
Author: Elias Kyriakides
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2014-09-13
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3662441608

This book describes the challenges that critical infrastructure systems face, and presents state of the art solutions to address them. How can we design intelligent systems or intelligent agents that can make appropriate real-time decisions in the management of such large-scale, complex systems? What are the primary challenges for critical infrastructure systems? The book also provides readers with the relevant information to recognize how important infrastructures are, and their role in connection with a society’s economy, security and prosperity. It goes on to describe state-of-the-art solutions to address these points, including new methodologies and instrumentation tools (e.g. embedded software and intelligent algorithms) for transforming and optimizing target infrastructures. The book is the most comprehensive resource to date for professionals in both the private and public sectors, while also offering an essential guide for students and researchers in the areas of modeling and analysis of critical infrastructure systems, monitoring, control, risk/impact evaluation, fault diagnosis, fault-tolerant control, and infrastructure dependencies/interdependencies. The importance of the research presented in the book is reflected in the fact that currently, for the first time in human history, more people live in cities than in rural areas, and that, by 2050, roughly 70% of the world’s total population is expected to live in cities.