Quantifying Distribution Shift in Traffic Signal Control with Histogram-Based GEH Distance
Taschin, Federico, Tonguz, Ozan K.
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Traffic signal control algorithms are vulnerable to distribution shift, where performance degrades under traffic conditions that differ from those seen during design or training. This paper introduces a principled approach to quantify distribution shift by representing traffic scenarios as demand histograms and comparing them with a GEH-based distance function. The method is policy-independent, interpretable, and leverages a widely used traffic engineering statistic. We validate the approach on 20 simulated scenarios using both a NEMA actuated controller and a reinforcement learning controller (FRAP++). Results show that larger scenario distances consistently correspond to increased travel time and reduced throughput, with particularly strong explanatory power for learning-based control. Overall, this method can predict performance degradation under distribution shift better than previously published techniques. These findings highlight the utility of the proposed framework for benchmarking, training regime design, and monitoring in adaptive traffic signal control.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-19-2025
- Country:
- Asia > China
- Europe > United Kingdom
- England > Greater London > London (0.04)
- North America > United States
- Arizona (0.04)
- California > Alameda County
- Berkeley (0.04)
- District of Columbia > Washington (0.04)
- Michigan > Ingham County
- East Lansing (0.04)
- Lansing (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report
- Experimental Study (0.69)
- New Finding (0.88)
- Research Report
- Industry:
- Transportation
- Ground > Road (1.00)
- Infrastructure & Services (1.00)
- Transportation
- Technology: