Incorporating General Incident Knowledge Into Automatic Incident Detection

Incorporating General Incident Knowledge Into Automatic Incident Detection

Author: Min Liu

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 67

ISBN-13:

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Automatic incident detection (AID) algorithms have been studied for more than 50 years. However, due to the development in some competing technologies such as cell phone call based detection, video detection, the importance of AID in traffic management has been decreasing over the years. In response to such trend, AID researchers introduced new universal and transferability requirements in addition to the traditional performance measures. Based on these requirements, the recent effort of AID research has been focused on applying new artificial intelligence (AI) models into incident detection and significant performance improvement has been observed comparing to earlier models. To fully address the new requirements, the existing AI models still have some limitations including 1) the black-box characteristics, 2) the overfitting issue, and 3) the requirement for clean, large, and accurate training data. Recently, Bayesian network (BN) based AID algorithm showed promising potentials in partially overcoming the above limitations with its open structure and explicit stochastic interpretation of incident knowledge. But BN still has its limitations such as the enforced cause-effect relationship among BN nodes and its Bayesian type of logic inference. In 2006, another more advanced statistical inference network, Markov Logic Network (MLN), was proposed in computer science, which can effectively overcome some limitations of BN and also bring the flexibility of applying various knowledge. In this study, an MLN-based AID algorithm is proposed. The proposed algorithm can interpret general types of traffic flow knowledge, not necessarily causality relationships. Meanwhile, a calibration method is also proposed to effective train the MLN. The algorithm is evaluated based on field data, collected at I-894 corridor in Milwaukee, WI. The results indicate promising potentials of the application of MLN in incident detection.


Computational Intelligence for Traffic and Mobility

Computational Intelligence for Traffic and Mobility

Author: Wuhong Wang

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-12

Total Pages: 343

ISBN-13: 9491216805

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This book presents the new development of computation intelligence for traffic, transportation and mobility, the main contents include traffic safety, mobility analysis, intelligent transportation system, smart vehicle, transportation behavior, driver modeling and assistance, transportation risk analysis and reliability system analysis, vehicle operation and active safety, urban traffic management and planning.


Developing a Real-time Freeway Incident Detection Model Using Machine Learning Techniques

Developing a Real-time Freeway Incident Detection Model Using Machine Learning Techniques

Author: Moggan Motamed

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 280

ISBN-13:

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Real-time incident detection on freeways plays an important part in any modern traffic management operation by maximizing road system performance. The US Department of Transportation (US-DOT) estimates that over half of all congestion events are caused by highway incidents rather than by rush-hour traffic in big cities. An effective incident detection and management operation cannot prevent incidents, however, it can diminish the impacts of non-recurring congestion problems. The main purpose of real-time incident detection is to reduce delay and the number of secondary accidents, and to improve safety and travel information during unusual traffic conditions. The majority of automatic incident detection algorithms are focused on identifying traffic incident patterns but do not adequately investigate possible similarities in patterns observed under incident-free conditions. When traffic demand exceeds road capacity, density exceeds critical values and traffic speed decreases, the traffic flow process enters a highly unstable regime, often referred to as “stop-and-go” conditions. The most challenging part of real-time incident detection is the recognition of traffic pattern changes when incidents happen during stop-and-go conditions. Recently, short-term freeway congestion detection algorithms have been proposed as solutions to real-time incident detection, using procedures known as dynamic time warping (DTW) and the support vector machine (SVM). Some studies have shown these procedures to produce higher detection rates than Artificial Intelligence (AI) algorithms with lower false alarm rates. These proposed methods combine data mining and time series classification techniques. Such methods comprise interdisciplinary efforts, with the confluence of a set of disciplines, including statistics, machine learning, Artificial Intelligence, and information science. A literature review of the methodology and application of these two models will be presented in the following chapters. SVM, Naïve Bayes (NB), and Random Forest classifier models incorporating temporal data and an ensemble technique, when compared with the original SVM model, achieve improved detection rates by optimizing the parameter thresholds. The main purpose of this dissertation is to examine the most robust algorithms (DTW, SVM, Naïve Bayes, Decision Tree, SVM Ensemble) and to develop a generalized automatic incident detection algorithm characterized by high detection rates and low false alarm rates during peak hours. In this dissertation, the transferability of the developed incident detection model was tested using the Dallas and Miami field datasets. Even though the primary service of urban traffic control centers includes detecting incidents and facilitating incident clearance, estimating freeway incident durations remains a significant incident management challenge for traffic operations centers. As a next step this study examines the effect of V/C (volume/capacity) ratio, level of service (LOS), weather condition, detection mode, number of involved lanes, and incident type on the time duration of traffic incidents. Results of this effort can benefit traffic control centers improving the accuracy of estimated incident duration, thereby improving the authenticity of traveler guidance information.