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Title:

An Overview of “Revisiting the Empirical Fundamental Relationship”

Accession Number:

01604724

Record Type:

Component

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Order URL: http://www.trb.org/Main/Blurbs/173225.aspx

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Order URL: http://worldcat.org/issn/00978515

Abstract:

This paper presents an extended overview of a new methodology for deriving an empirical fundamental relationship from vehicle detector data. The new methodology seeks to address several sources of noise present in conventional measures of the traffic state that arise from the data aggregation process (e.g., averaging across all vehicles over a fixed time period). In the new methodology vehicles are no longer taken successively in the order in which they arrived, and there is no requirement to seek out stationary traffic conditions; rather, the traffic state is measured over the headway for each individual vehicle passage, and the vehicles are grouped by similar lengths and speeds before aggregation. Care is also taken to exclude measurements that might be corrupted by detector errors. The result is a homogeneous set of vehicles and speeds in each bin. While conventional fixed time averages may have fewer than 10 vehicles in a sample, the new binning process ensures a large number of vehicles in each bin before aggregation. Researchers calculate the median flow and median occupancy for each combined length and speed bin. Then they connect these median points across all of the speed bins for a given vehicle length to derive the empirical fundamental relationship for that length. This use of the median is also important; unlike conventional aggregation techniques that find the average, the median is far less sensitive to outliers arising from uncommon driver behavior or occasional detector errors.

Monograph Accession #:

01602496

Language:

English

Authors:

Coifman, Benjamin

Pagination:

pp 18-24

Publication Date:

2015-9

Serial:

Transportation Research Circular

Issue Number: E-C197
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
ISSN: 0097-8515

Conference:

Standing Committee on Traffic Flow Theory and Characteristics Summer Meeting

Location: Portland Oregon, United States
Date: 2014-8-11 to 2014-8-13
Sponsors: Transportation Research Board

Media Type:

Print

Features:

Figures; References

Candidate Terms:

Uncontrolled Terms:

Subject Areas:

Highways; Operations and Traffic Management; Planning and Forecasting

Files:

TRIS, TRB, ATRI

Created Date:

Jun 16 2016 11:10AM

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