The psychology of the left-turn lane: How human behavior influences traffic patterns

April 21st, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Apr-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Daniel Stolte
stolte@email.arizona.edu
520-626-4402
University of Arizona

The Federal Highway Administration is funding a $1.2 million traffic analysis research program headed by University of Arizona civil engineering associate professor Yi-Chang Chiu

University of Arizona traffic engineer Yi-Chang Chiu has embarked on a three-year traffic modeling research project to replace the 1950s model still used to forecast current transportation needs.

Chiu’s new model incorporates individual human behavior traits into traffic modeling on a day-by-day basis, which will allow him and his team to forecast the evolution of behavior with a transportation system over a long period.

The project is known as VASTO, which comes from its full title, Evolutionary Agent System for Transportation Outlook.

“The deficiency in past practices basically lies in the inability to describe human behavior in a realistic manner,” said Chiu, who also is director of the DynusT Lab at the UA College of Engineering. “In our past predictions, we treated everybody pretty much the same.”

Previous models predicted population movement more on a macro level, Chiu said. “We simulate individuals.”

The human behavior element will be derived from census data and metropolitan planning organization travel surveys. This will incorporate the range of human whims with driving decisions, such as stopping at the store or suddenly deciding to go straight if too many cars are in the left-turn lane. VASTO simulates habitual patterns with real-time reactions.

This proposed VASTO modeling system marks the first time that individual human behavior is at the heart of traffic modeling rather than relying on past traffic trends and extrapolating them.

Chiu’s ambition for VASTO is to give transportation planners a robust behavior based tool to find alternative ways to provide adequate transportation without necessarily just adding more lanes or building more roads.

“Most cities keep on building to meet peak congestion hours,” Chiu said. He wants to determine whether we achieve more by building less, or by not building at all. “In the past we did not understand the mechanics of behavior so we didn’t know how to manage data,” he said.

The overall goal of the project is to completely change the approach to traffic management. Chiu wants to know: “If I don’t build it, is there another way to manage and influence behavior? That way we can better utilize existing infrastructure.”

This planning tool will allow planners to see what would happen if, for example, traffic was rerouted because of bridge construction, or if construction of a cross-town freeway was proposed, or a regional shopping center.

“You can perform what-if analyses,” Chiu said. “We have not been able to do this in the past because the computer has not been fast enough to run a model in a reasonable amount of time.”

The size of the $1.2 million FHWA grant is an indicator of the significance of Chiu’s VASTO research. “In transportation, this is a top-of-the-line grant size,” he said. “For a single project, that’s very large.”

VASTO will ultimately be a free, open-source technology, although users will require extensive training.

###

Chiu’s research partners at the UA are Young-Jun Son and Larry Head in the systems and industrial engineering; Mark Hickman in the civil engineering and engineering mechanics department; and Sandi Rosenbloom in the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Jyh-Ming Lien of the computer science department at George Mason University also is a research team member.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 20-Apr-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Daniel Stolte
stolte@email.arizona.edu
520-626-4402
University of Arizona

The Federal Highway Administration is funding a $1.2 million traffic analysis research program headed by University of Arizona civil engineering associate professor Yi-Chang Chiu

University of Arizona traffic engineer Yi-Chang Chiu has embarked on a three-year traffic modeling research project to replace the 1950s model still used to forecast current transportation needs.

Chiu’s new model incorporates individual human behavior traits into traffic modeling on a day-by-day basis, which will allow him and his team to forecast the evolution of behavior with a transportation system over a long period.

The project is known as VASTO, which comes from its full title, Evolutionary Agent System for Transportation Outlook.

“The deficiency in past practices basically lies in the inability to describe human behavior in a realistic manner,” said Chiu, who also is director of the DynusT Lab at the UA College of Engineering. “In our past predictions, we treated everybody pretty much the same.”

Previous models predicted population movement more on a macro level, Chiu said. “We simulate individuals.”

The human behavior element will be derived from census data and metropolitan planning organization travel surveys. This will incorporate the range of human whims with driving decisions, such as stopping at the store or suddenly deciding to go straight if too many cars are in the left-turn lane. VASTO simulates habitual patterns with real-time reactions.

This proposed VASTO modeling system marks the first time that individual human behavior is at the heart of traffic modeling rather than relying on past traffic trends and extrapolating them.

Chiu’s ambition for VASTO is to give transportation planners a robust behavior based tool to find alternative ways to provide adequate transportation without necessarily just adding more lanes or building more roads.

“Most cities keep on building to meet peak congestion hours,” Chiu said. He wants to determine whether we achieve more by building less, or by not building at all. “In the past we did not understand the mechanics of behavior so we didn’t know how to manage data,” he said.

The overall goal of the project is to completely change the approach to traffic management. Chiu wants to know: “If I don’t build it, is there another way to manage and influence behavior? That way we can better utilize existing infrastructure.”

This planning tool will allow planners to see what would happen if, for example, traffic was rerouted because of bridge construction, or if construction of a cross-town freeway was proposed, or a regional shopping center.

“You can perform what-if analyses,” Chiu said. “We have not been able to do this in the past because the computer has not been fast enough to run a model in a reasonable amount of time.”

The size of the $1.2 million FHWA grant is an indicator of the significance of Chiu’s VASTO research. “In transportation, this is a top-of-the-line grant size,” he said. “For a single project, that’s very large.”

VASTO will ultimately be a free, open-source technology, although users will require extensive training.

###

Chiu’s research partners at the UA are Young-Jun Son and Larry Head in the systems and industrial engineering; Mark Hickman in the civil engineering and engineering mechanics department; and Sandi Rosenbloom in the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Jyh-Ming Lien of the computer science department at George Mason University also is a research team member.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


cnn debate equatorial guinea marine helicopter crash chicago weather star jones evan longoria wheres my refund

The Robotic, Disco-Loving Waitstaff of the 1980s [Video]

April 21st, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

More »


hallmark grammy winners obama budget woolly mammoth belize resorts nikki minaj grammy performance shel silverstein

Samsung iCloud Competitor Will Apparently Debut Alongside Galaxy S III. Sigh. [Samsung]

April 21st, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

Samsung’s S-Cloud, which seems like a six-letter middle finger to the design lawsuit lawyers, will be out with the Galaxy S III next month, according to Korean newspaper Maeil Business. The only thing is, uhh, why? More »


tim gunn tim gunn built to last obama state of the union address 2012 obama speech terrell owens terrell owens

Barobo’s Mobot goes up for pre-order, slinks toward your impressionable children (video)

April 20th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

ImageIn what may be the first notable instance of a product actually losing the “i” in favor of building out its own persona, Barobo’s iMobot is not only not going by Mobot, but it’s also up for pre-order. The modular robotics platform can be claimed for $269.95 (with extension plates and the like available as optional extras), and we’re told by the company that these will be on the move by August at the latest. Moreover, a grant has been secured to provide “at least $500,000 over the next two years to Barobo, with potential for up to another $500,000 in matching funds if the company can make sales and attract venture capital.” Folks involved with the project are hoping to see Mobot used as a tool for teaching robotics as early as third grade, and given the choice of tinkering with one of these or fiddling with a TI-83 Plus… well, you know. For those unaware of Mobot’s potential, head on past the break for a freshly cut video.

Continue reading Barobo’s Mobot goes up for pre-order, slinks toward your impressionable children (video)

Barobo’s Mobot goes up for pre-order, slinks toward your impressionable children (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Apr 2012 08:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBarobo, UC Davis  | Email this | Comments

sign of the times keystone pipeline purim acc tournament big ten tournament big east tournament 2012 solar storm

Magnifi Case Helps You Record Scientific Wonders With Your iPhone

April 20th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

The Magnifi iPhone case helps you photograph the tiny world of germs and insect guts.

ben roethlisberger downton abbey season 2 2013 dodge dart shameless kwame brown martin luther king day blue ivy

Diddy Is Forbes Magazine?s Richest Rapper

April 20th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

Rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs topped a list of hip hop’s wealthiest artists compiled by Forbes on Wednesday, beating out contemporaries Jay-Z, Dr. Dre, Birdman and 50 Cent. Combs’ net worth was estimated at $550 million, including high returns from his investment in Ciroc vodka as well as clothing lines Sean John and Enyce, record label [...]

esophageal cancer marfan syndrome marfan syndrome britney spears engaged craig smith craig smith eat to live

GM: Explosion at battery research facility ?unrelated to the Chevrolet Volt?

April 19th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

One person was hurt at the GM research site in Michigan during ?extreme testing on a prototype battery? unrelated to the Volt ?or any other production vehicle,? the company said.

An explosion during “extreme battery testing” Wednesday morning of a prototype energy cell at a General Motors battery research facility in Warren, Mich., injured one person and did major structural damage to the building.

Skip to next paragraph

At the heart of the explosion was a lithium-ion battery, according to a fire department official cited in local news reports. The morning blast did not, however, involve batteries that power the Chevrolet Volt, the new plug-in hybrid car whose batteries caught fire weeks after a crash test, General Motors said in a statement.

But the flap over the Volt battery fire has left some insiders feeling more than a little peeved and defensive at the amount of news media attention being devoted to what they say is an almost inevitable, if not routine, event in the business of battery research and extreme testing.

“The whole reason they have these labs is precisely to do this kind of aggressive testing ? anticipating the worst thing a consumer could do with this product,” says one expert with direct knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the explosion, who asked not to be named. “This is going to turn out to be a mountain out of a mole hill. Yeah, we’re doing a lot of testing. That’s what we have to do. Sometimes things explode.”

?The incident is still under investigation by GM and the Warren authorities,” the GM statement said. “Any information or discussion of the nature of the work in the lab or cause of the incident is entirely speculative and cannot be confirmed at this time. The incident was unrelated to the Chevrolet Volt or any other production vehicle. The incident was related to extreme testing on a prototype battery.?

Despite criticism of the Volt by conservative pundits, a follow-up investigation by the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration concluded the new car was no more prone to fire than any other vehicle.

“The debate over batteries recently really hasn’t been about safety so much as about their longevity,” says Tom Turrentine, director of the plug-in hybrid and electric vehicle research center at the University of California, Davis. “I think we are mostly over the hump with battery safety. But there’s no question that battery labs are notorious for explosions when they’re testing.”

Lithium-ion batteries are attractive to automakers because they can hold so much power ? about four times the amount of energy a conventional lead-acid battery. Even so, earlier lithium-ion batteries used in other commercial applications burst into flame on occasion. Laptop computer manufacturer Dell Computer recalled millions of batteries after a handful of its laptops burst into flames several years ago.

whitney houston whitney houston autopsy results obama trayvon jim yong kim michael bush the host trailer whitney houston cause of death

Curved panel gives more depth to 3D projections, we take a look at NAB (video)

April 19th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

Image

What we’re about to show you is decidedly low-tech — it’s essentially a projection screen with a sharp curve at the bottom — but the resulting effect conveys a more realistic 3D image, for certain applications, at least. The Communications Research Centre of Canada was on hand at NAB to demonstrate a small variety of lab projects, with agency representatives hoping to make an impression on attendees, who will theoretically apply these concepts to actual products, with no licensing fee making its way back to the True North. This particular project employs an off-the-shelf Optoma 3D projector, active glasses and a white screen positioned with a dramatic curve, that essentially works to provide a platform for 3D subjects to stand on.

Believe it or not, the config really does make a difference, enabling a more immersive experience that makes 3D objects appear more realistic, assuming they’re positioned in such a way that they’re standing on the near-horizontal portion of the screen. Research Technologist Ron Renaud says that such a configuration would be ideal for video conferencing — it’s still no match for an in-person meeting, but it’s certainly an improvement over the traditional approach. The demonstration projector wasn’t configured to compensate for the curve, which theoretically makes it subject to warping, though we didn’t notice any issues at the show. Like all 3D displays, you’ll really need to see it for yourself to get an accurate impression of the experience, but jump past the break for an overview with Renaud, and a closer look at the screen.

Continue reading Curved panel gives more depth to 3D projections, we take a look at NAB (video)

Curved panel gives more depth to 3D projections, we take a look at NAB (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Apr 2012 16:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


j edgar hoover jonathan papelbon jonathan papelbon trisomy 13 veterans barbados resorts the call

Spain threatens action over Argentina oil move

April 19th, 2012 § 0 comments § permalink

By Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

Spain threatened economic retaliation against Argentina Tuesday after Buenos Aires took control of an oil company said to be worth $18 billion.

Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner replaced the chief executive officer of oil firm YPF — the country’s biggest firm — and said she would send a bill to congress to take a 51 percent stake in the company, the Bloomberg news agency reported.


Spanish oil firm Repsol is the major shareholder in YPF and it said it would seek compensation on the bases that YPF was worth $18 billion. However, its shares dropped by more than eight percent Tuesday, Reuters said.

“With this attitude, this hostility from the Argentine authorities, there will be consequences that we’ll see over the next few days. They will be in the diplomatic field, the industrial field, and on energy,”?Spanish industry minister Jose Manuel Soria said, according to Reuters.

He added that the government would take “clear and decisive” measures, according to Bloomberg.

Madrid called in the Argentinean ambassador in a rapidly escalating row over the nationalization order, Reuters said.

Fernandez: I’m ‘not a thug’
Fernandez’s move delighted many of her compatriots but alarmed some foreign governments and investors.?

“This president isn’t going to respond to any threats … because I represent the Argentine people. I’m the head of state, not a thug,” she said, according to Reuters.?

Fernandez said the government would ask Congress, which she controls, to approve a bill to expropriate a controlling 51 percent stake in the company by seizing shares held exclusively by Repsol, saying energy was a “vital resource.”?

“If this [the YPF's] policy continues — draining fields dry, no exploration and practically no investment — the country will end up having no viable future, not because of a lack of resources but because of business policies,” she said.?

Repsol described Argentina’s move as “clearly unlawful and seriously discriminatory.”?”This battle is not over,” Repsol chairman Antonio Brufau said.?

Spanish media condemned the Argentinean action, which Reuters said was believed to be the biggest nationalization in the natural resources field since the seizure of Russia’s Yukos a decade ago.?

Right-wing newspaper La Razon carried a photograph of Fernandez on its front page in a pool of oil with the headline: “Kirchner’s Dirty War”, referring to her full name. The business newspaper La Gaceta de los Negocios branded the takeover “an act of pillage”.?

On the left, El Periodico spoke of “The New Evita”, pointing out that Fernandez had announced the nationalization in a room decorated with a portrait of Eva Peron, the actress who was married to a president and revered by many Argentineans for her populist politics.?

More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Norway mass killer Anders Breivik: I ‘would do it all again’

NYT: Afghan assaults signal evolution of militant foe

Tunisia still wants sun lovers, new Islamist government says

Sources: Briton killed after threat to expose Chinese leader’s wife

US prepares for last major Afghanistan offensive

Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

ron paul molly sims hostess brands nh primary david crowder band natalie wood van halen