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 traffic congestion


Dynamic Configuration of On-Street Parking Spaces using Multi Agent Reinforcement Learning

Jayasinghe, Oshada, Choudhury, Farhana, Tanin, Egemen, Karunasekera, Shanika

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

With increased travelling needs more than ever, traffic congestion has become a major concern in most urban areas. Allocating spaces for on-street parking, further hinders traffic flow, by limiting the effective road width available for driving. With the advancement of vehicle-to-infrastructure connectivity technologies, we explore how the impact of on-street parking on traffic congestion could be minimized, by dynamically configuring on-street parking spaces. Towards that end, we formulate dynamic on-street parking space configuration as an optimization problem, and we follow a data driven approach, considering the nature of our problem. Our proposed solution comprises a two-layer multi agent reinforcement learning based framework, which is inherently scalable to large road networks. The lane level agents are responsible for deciding the optimal parking space configuration for each lane, and we introduce a novel Deep Q-learning architecture which effectively utilizes long short term memory networks and graph attention networks to capture the spatio-temporal correlations evident in the given problem. The block level agents control the actions of the lane level agents and maintain a sufficient level of parking around the block. We conduct a set of comprehensive experiments using SUMO, on both synthetic data as well as real-world data from the city of Melbourne. Our experiments show that the proposed framework could reduce the average travel time loss of vehicles significantly, reaching upto 47%, with a negligible increase in the walking distance for parking.


Accident-Driven Congestion Prediction and Simulation: An Explainable Framework Using Advanced Clustering and Bayesian Networks

Talluri, Kranthi Kumar, Weidl, Galia, Kasuluru, Vaishnavi

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Traffic congestion due to uncertainties, such as accidents, is a significant issue in urban areas, as the ripple effect of accidents causes longer delays, increased emissions, and safety concerns. To address this issue, we propose a robust framework for predicting the impact of accidents on congestion. We implement Automated Machine Learning (AutoML)-enhanced Deep Embedding Clustering (DEC) to assign congestion labels to accident data and predict congestion probability using a Bayesian Network (BN). The Simulation of Urban Mobility (SUMO) simulation is utilized to evaluate the correctness of BN predictions using evidence-based scenarios. Results demonstrate that the AutoML-enhanced DEC has outperformed traditional clustering approaches. The performance of the proposed BN model achieved an overall accuracy of 95.6%, indicating its ability to understand the complex relationship of accidents causing congestion. Validation in SUMO with evidence-based scenarios demonstrated that the BN model's prediction of congestion states closely matches those of SUMO, indicating the high reliability of the proposed BN model in ensuring smooth urban mobility.


Traffic and Mobility Optimization Using AI: Comparative Study between Dubai and Riyadh

Aalijah, Kanwal

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Urban planning plays a very important role in development modern cities. It effects the economic growth, quality of life, and environmental sustainability. Modern cities face challenges in managing traffic congestion. These challenges arise to due to rapid urbanization. In this study we will explore how AI can be used to understand the traffic and mobility related issues and its effects on the residents sentiment. The approach combines real-time traffic data with geo-located sentiment analysis, offering a comprehensive and dynamic approach to urban mobility planning. AI models and exploratory data analysis was used to predict traffic congestion patterns, analyze commuter behaviors, and identify congestion hotspots and dissatisfaction zones. The findings offer actionable recommendations for optimizing traffic flow, enhancing commuter experiences, and addressing city specific mobility challenges in the Middle East and beyond.


AI-Driven Scenarios for Urban Mobility: Quantifying the Role of ODE Models and Scenario Planning in Reducing Traffic Congestion

Bahamazava, Katsiaryna

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Urbanization and technological advancements are reshaping urban mobility, presenting both challenges and opportunities. This paper investigates how Artificial Intelligence (AI)-driven technologies can impact traffic congestion dynamics and explores their potential to enhance transportation systems' efficiency. Specifically, we assess the role of AI innovations, such as autonomous vehicles and intelligent traffic management, in mitigating congestion under varying regulatory frameworks. Autonomous vehicles reduce congestion through optimized traffic flow, real-time route adjustments, and decreased human errors. The study employs Ordinary Differential Equations (ODEs) to model the dynamic relationship between AI adoption rates and traffic congestion, capturing systemic feedback loops. Quantitative outputs include threshold levels of AI adoption needed to achieve significant congestion reduction, while qualitative insights stem from scenario planning exploring regulatory and societal conditions. This dual-method approach offers actionable strategies for policymakers to create efficient, sustainable, and equitable urban transportation systems. While safety implications of AI are acknowledged, this study primarily focuses on congestion reduction dynamics.


A Predictive and Optimization Approach for Enhanced Urban Mobility Using Spatiotemporal Data

Mishra, Shambhavi, Murthy, T. Satyanarayana

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In modern urban centers, effective transportation management poses a significant challenge, with traffic jams and inconsistent travel durations greatly affecting commuters and logistics operations. This study introduces a novel method for enhancing urban mobility by combining machine learning algorithms with live traffic information. We developed predictive models for journey time and congestion analysis using data from New York City's yellow taxi trips. The research employed a spatiotemporal analysis framework to identify traffic trends and implemented real-time route optimization using the GraphHopper API. This system determines the most efficient paths based on current conditions, adapting to changes in traffic flow. The methodology utilizes Spark MLlib for predictive modeling and Spark Streaming for processing data in real-time. By integrating historical data analysis with current traffic inputs, our system shows notable enhancements in both travel time forecasts and route optimization, demonstrating its potential for widespread application in major urban areas. This research contributes to ongoing efforts aimed at reducing urban congestion and improving transportation efficiency through advanced data-driven methods.


Fuel tax loss in a world of electric mobility: A window of opportunity for congestion pricing

Nguyen, Thi Ngoc, Muesgens, Felix

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The continued transition towards electric mobility will decrease energy tax revenues worldwide, which has substantial implications for government funds. At the same time, demand for transportation is ever increasing, which in turn increases congestion problems. Combining both challenges, this paper assesses the effectiveness of congestion pricing as a sustainable revenue stream to offset fuel tax loss in 2030 while simultaneously enhancing efficiency in the transport sector. A congestion-based toll that is road-and-time-variant is simulated for the greater Berlin area in Germany using the multi-agent transport simulation (MATSim) software. Through the simulation results, this paper quantifies the impacts of the toll on the governmental revenue, traffic management, environment, social welfare, and the distribution effects. We find that the revenue from congestion tolls in a metropolitan area can compensate the reduction in passenger car fuel tax. Furthermore, a remarkable welfare surplus is observed. The toll also successfully incentivises transport users to adjust their travel behaviour, which reduces traffic delay time by 28%. CO2 emissions as a key metric for decarbonisation of the transport sector decrease by more than 5%. The analysis of the distribution effects suggests that a redistribution plan with a focus on the middle-low-income residents and the outer boroughs could help the policy gain more public acceptance.


Predicting Traffic Congestion at Urban Intersections Using Data-Driven Modeling

Kelly, Tara, Gupta, Jessica

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Urban traffic congestion is a significant challenge faced by modern cities, impacting commute times, safety, and overall quality of life for residents (Weisbrod et al., 2003). Intersections, which serve as crucial points of convergence for vehicular traffic, are particularly susceptible to congestion, leading to stop-and-go patterns and increased travel times (Gazis, 2002). Predicting congestion at intersections can provide valuable insights for city planners and governments, enabling them to implement strategies for optimizing traffic flow, enhancing infrastructure, and improving the overall transportation system (Wang et al., 2016). This study aims to develop a predictive model for congestion at intersections in major U.S. cities, leveraging a comprehensive dataset of trip-logging metrics from commercial vehicles. The dataset encompasses a wide range of features, including intersection coordinates, street names, time of day, and traffic metrics, providing a rich source of information for identifying potential congestion patterns.


xMTrans: Temporal Attentive Cross-Modality Fusion Transformer for Long-Term Traffic Prediction

Ung, Huy Quang, Niu, Hao, Dao, Minh-Son, Wada, Shinya, Minamikawa, Atsunori

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Traffic predictions play a crucial role in intelligent transportation systems. The rapid development of IoT devices allows us to collect different kinds of data with high correlations to traffic predictions, fostering the development of efficient multi-modal traffic prediction models. Until now, there are few studies focusing on utilizing advantages of multi-modal data for traffic predictions. In this paper, we introduce a novel temporal attentive cross-modality transformer model for long-term traffic predictions, namely xMTrans, with capability of exploring the temporal correlations between the data of two modalities: one target modality (for prediction, e.g., traffic congestion) and one support modality (e.g., people flow). We conducted extensive experiments to evaluate our proposed model on traffic congestion and taxi demand predictions using real-world datasets. The results showed the superiority of xMTrans against recent state-of-the-art methods on long-term traffic predictions. In addition, we also conducted a comprehensive ablation study to further analyze the effectiveness of each module in xMTrans.


A Multi-Agent Rollout Approach for Highway Bottleneck Decongenston in Mixed Autonomy

Liu, Lu, Wang, Maonan, Pun, Man-On, Xiong, Xi

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The integration of autonomous vehicles (AVs) into the existing transportation infrastructure offers a promising solution to alleviate congestion and enhance mobility. This research explores a novel approach to traffic optimization by employing a multi-agent rollout approach within a mixed autonomy environment. The study concentrates on coordinating the speed of human-driven vehicles by longitudinally controlling AVs, aiming to dynamically optimize traffic flow and alleviate congestion at highway bottlenecks in real-time. We model the problem as a decentralized partially observable Markov decision process (Dec-POMDP) and propose an improved multi-agent rollout algorithm. By employing agent-by-agent policy iterations, our approach implicitly considers cooperation among multiple agents and seamlessly adapts to complex scenarios where the number of agents dynamically varies. Validated in a real-world network with varying AV penetration rates and traffic flow, the simulations demonstrate that the multi-agent rollout algorithm significantly enhances performance, reducing average travel time on bottleneck segments by 9.42% with a 10% AV penetration rate.


TrafPS: A Shapley-based Visual Analytics Approach to Interpret Traffic

Feng, Zezheng, Jiang, Yifan, Wang, Hongjun, Fan, Zipei, Ma, Yuxin, Yang, Shuang-Hua, Qu, Huamin, Song, Xuan

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Recent achievements in deep learning (DL) have shown its potential for predicting traffic flows. Such predictions are beneficial for understanding the situation and making decisions in traffic control. However, most state-of-the-art DL models are considered "black boxes" with little to no transparency for end users with respect to the underlying mechanisms. Some previous work tried to "open the black boxes" and increase the interpretability of how predictions are generated. However, it still remains challenging to handle complex models on large-scale spatio-temporal data and discover salient spatial and temporal patterns that significantly influence traffic flows. To overcome the challenges, we present TrafPS, a visual analytics approach for interpreting traffic prediction outcomes to support decision-making in traffic management and urban planning. The measurements, region SHAP and trajectory SHAP, are proposed to quantify the impact of flow patterns on urban traffic at different levels. Based on the task requirement from the domain experts, we employ an interactive visual interface for multi-aspect exploration and analysis of significant flow patterns. Two real-world case studies demonstrate the effectiveness of TrafPS in identifying key routes and decision-making support for urban planning.