Title: Application of Computer Simulation in Traffic Analysis
1Application of Computer Simulation in Traffic
Analysis
2Motor Vehicle is a Mixed Blessing
- During a average day in U.S., about 100 people
step into a vehicle and do not emerge alive - gt90 crashes attributed to driver error rather
than failures in the vehicle or roadway - The most important factor in driver error is
alcohol (40) - A better understanding of other errors might
allow people travel at lower risk
3Inappropriate Lane Changing May Have Substantial
Risks
- It causes the individual to straddle traffic
flows and be exposed to two streams of vehicles - It requires the driver to make rapid judgments
about sufficient spacing - It increases the hazard related to other vehicles
approaching along the drivers blind spot - Is disrupts the traffic pattern for following
vehicles
4Question?
- Whether people can accurately judge if they are
in a lane that is slower than the other lane on a
congested roadway? - Survey indicate most people expect to spend equal
amounts of time passing and being overtaken - A videotape obtained from field observations
confirmed peoples mistaken impressions of speed
on a congested roadway
5Answer
- Since testing on real drivers seamed to be
unsafe, unethical and expensive, how do we find
out the answer to above question? - Answer Computer Simulation
6Method Individual Vehicle Perspective
- A vehicle would accelerate if it was traveling
slower than its target speed and no other vehicle
ahead was within the minimum headway distance - A vehicle would decelerate if another vehicle was
ahead and within the minimum headway distance - A vehicle would maintain a constant speed if it
achieved target speed and no other vehicle ahead
was too close
7Method Individual Vehicle Perspective
- The target speed was 63 mi/h (100km/h) for all
vehicles - The acceleration and deceleration was set uniform
for all vehicles - The minimum headway distance (d) was a function
of velocity (v), where - d (v2/100) 1
- thus a vehicle traveling at 100km/h requires a
minimum headway of 101 m
8Aggregate Traffic Characteristics
- The number of vehicles and amount of available
roadway was stable, thus conditions which
provided little total roadway for large numbers
of vehicles resulted in substantial congestion - The completely realistic simulation of a single
lane of traffic was impossible because vehicles
can differ in target speed, headway tolerance,
acceleration, deceleration, starting position,
current velocity.
9Aggregate Traffic Characteristics
- The model was designed with a few initial sources
of randomness, then gradually made more complex - The baseline condition assumed that all vehicles
has identical performance and starting at zero
velocity - The starting position (spacing between vehicles)
was generated by normal distribution
10Aggregate Traffic Characteristics
- The second lane was established with
characteristics identical to the index lane - By applying a different starting seed to the
random generator, the two lanes could follow
somewhat different patterns yet obtain the same
average speed
11Psychological and Statistical Issues
- People tend to judge their speed by assessing
their speed relative to others in the next lane - Passing epoch
- when the index driver started behind and ended
ahead of one or more drivers in the other lane
after a one-second interval - Being overtaken epoch
- when the index driver started ahead and ended
behind one or more drivers in the other lane
after a one-second interval - Drivers prefer passing rather than being overtaken
12Speed and Position of Vehicle in Single Lane
- Long intervals of slow velocity and short bursts
of high velocity - Strong and correlation between a vehicles
current speed and spacing relative to vehicle
ahead
13Compare to Vehicle in Next Lane
- Substantial variation in relative speed and
relative position was observed even over a short
period of time
14Summary of Finding
- Epochs in which the index car was overtaken were
more frequent than epochs in which the index care
was passing(43 vs. 33, ratio 130) - However, the total number of overtakes equaled
the total number of passes - The baseline condition indicated that the next
line might mistakenly appear faster than the
drivers current line
15Reasons for the mistaken impression
- A driver on a congested roadway can pass many
vehicles in a brief interval, whereas it takes
much more time for the driver to be overtaken by
the same number of vehicles - Although every driver should normally expect to
spend more time going slower than going faster,
people usually expect that the amount of good
times should balance the amount of bad times
16Other factors
- Drivers direct more attention ahead than behind
consequently, passed vehicle turn invisible
whereas overtake vehicle stay conspicuous - Glances at the next lane may be more frequent
when drivers are relatively idle - Human psychology may make losses appear more
salient than the corresponding gains
17Less Congested Roadway
- Lesser congestion leads to higher speed, fewer
passing and overtaking epochs, and smaller
asymmetry
18Conclusion
- Results from computer simulation suggested a
roadway illusion namely, that the next lane on
a congested roadway appears to be moving faster
than the drivers current lane even if both lanes
have the same average speed - Naïve attempts to rush may be misguided without a
careful understanding of queuing theory