Movement-Based Look-Ahead Traffic-Adaptive Intersection Control
Reference
R.T. van Katwijk,
B. De Schutter, and
J. Hellendoorn,
"Movement-Based Look-Ahead Traffic-Adaptive Intersection Control,"
Proceedings of the UKACC International Conference on
Control 2008, London, UK, 6 pp., Sept. 2008. Paper Th09.01.
Abstract
There exist several control approaches for traffic signal control such
as fixed-time, vehicle-actuated, or look-ahead traffic-adaptive
control. We argue that in order to flexibly deal with varying demand
levels movement-based control (which is already common in
vehicle-actuated intersection control) is required instead of
stage-based control (which is still employed in the state-of-the-art
in look-ahead traffic-adaptive control). The movement-based approach
is more flexible than the stage-based approach as it allows green for
signals in different stages to start sooner if the demand for all
conflicting movements in the current stage has cleared. Therefore, we
propose a new movement-based method for
look-ahead traffic-adaptive control. The method uses dynamic
programming and branch-and-bound algorithms to determine the optimal
traffic signal settings. We illustrate via a simulation example that
the new approach can significantly outperform vehicle-actuated and
stage-based look-ahead traffic-adaptive control.
Downloads
- Corresponding technical report:
pdf
file
(420 KB)
Bibtex entry
@inproceedings{vanDeS:08-014,
author={R.T. van Katwijk and B. {D}e Schutter and J. Hellendoorn},
title={Movement-Based Look-Ahead Traffic-Adaptive Intersection Control},
booktitle={Proceedings of the UKACC International Conference on Control
2008},
address={London, UK},
month=sep,
year={2008},
note={Paper Th09.01}
}
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Last update: February 21, 2026.