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Modelling acceleration decisions in traffic streams with weak lane discipline: A latent leader approach.

Authors :
Choudhury, Charisma F.
Islam, Md. Mozahidul
Source :
Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies. Jun2016, Vol. 67, p214-226. 13p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Acceleration is an important driving manoeuvre that has been modelled for decades as a critical element of the microscopic traffic simulation tools. The state-of-the art acceleration models have however primarily focused on lane based traffic. In lane based traffic, every driver has a single distinct lead vehicle in the front and the acceleration of the driver is typically modelled as a function of the relative speed, position and/or type of the corresponding leader. On the contrary, in a traffic stream with weak lane discipline , the subject driver may have multiple vehicles in the front. The subject driver is therefore subjected to multiple sources of stimulus for acceleration and reacts to the stimulus from the governing leader . However, only the applied accelerations are observed in the trajectory data, and the governing leader is unobserved or latent . The state-of-the-art models therefore cannot be directly applied to traffic streams with weak lane discipline. This prompts the current research where we present a latent leader acceleration model. The model has two components: a random utility based dynamic class membership model (latent leader component) and a class-specific acceleration model (acceleration component). The parameters of the model have been calibrated using detailed trajectory data collected from Dhaka, Bangladesh. Results indicate that the probability of a given front vehicle of being the governing leader can depend on the type of the lead vehicle and the extent of lateral overlap with the subject driver. The estimation results are compared against a simpler acceleration model (where the leader is determined deterministically) and a significant improvement in the goodness-of-fit is observed. The proposed models, when implemented in microscopic traffic simulation tools, are expected to result more realistic representation of traffic streams with weak lane discipline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0968090X
Volume :
67
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
115369222
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trc.2016.02.010