Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization
A nice night of October 2007, in Beijing, during the XV World Conference on ITS a number of colleagues met informally for a dinner party that spontaneously became a vivid discussion on the importance of traffic data for all types of p- poses. Researchers can hardly do any progress in modeling, developing, and te- ing theories without suitable data, and what practitioners can do in real life is limited not only by technology but also by the availability of the required data. Quite frequently, the data and not the technologies are what determine how far we can go. Any discussion about traffic data leads in a natural way to a discussion on the variety of traffic data sources, formats, levels of aggregation, accuracies, and so on. Consequently, we moved to talk on the initiative that Kuwahara had undertaken in his traffic laboratory at the University of Tokyo, known as the International Traffic Data Base, and thus smoothly but inexorably we came to agree that it would be convenient to organize a workshop to continue our discussion at a more formal level, share our points of view with other colleagues, listen what they had to say and, if possible, d- seminate the findings in our professional and academic communities.
1129749190
Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization
A nice night of October 2007, in Beijing, during the XV World Conference on ITS a number of colleagues met informally for a dinner party that spontaneously became a vivid discussion on the importance of traffic data for all types of p- poses. Researchers can hardly do any progress in modeling, developing, and te- ing theories without suitable data, and what practitioners can do in real life is limited not only by technology but also by the availability of the required data. Quite frequently, the data and not the technologies are what determine how far we can go. Any discussion about traffic data leads in a natural way to a discussion on the variety of traffic data sources, formats, levels of aggregation, accuracies, and so on. Consequently, we moved to talk on the initiative that Kuwahara had undertaken in his traffic laboratory at the University of Tokyo, known as the International Traffic Data Base, and thus smoothly but inexorably we came to agree that it would be convenient to organize a workshop to continue our discussion at a more formal level, share our points of view with other colleagues, listen what they had to say and, if possible, d- seminate the findings in our professional and academic communities.
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Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization

Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization

Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization

Traffic Data Collection and its Standardization

Hardcover(2010)

$109.99 
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Overview

A nice night of October 2007, in Beijing, during the XV World Conference on ITS a number of colleagues met informally for a dinner party that spontaneously became a vivid discussion on the importance of traffic data for all types of p- poses. Researchers can hardly do any progress in modeling, developing, and te- ing theories without suitable data, and what practitioners can do in real life is limited not only by technology but also by the availability of the required data. Quite frequently, the data and not the technologies are what determine how far we can go. Any discussion about traffic data leads in a natural way to a discussion on the variety of traffic data sources, formats, levels of aggregation, accuracies, and so on. Consequently, we moved to talk on the initiative that Kuwahara had undertaken in his traffic laboratory at the University of Tokyo, known as the International Traffic Data Base, and thus smoothly but inexorably we came to agree that it would be convenient to organize a workshop to continue our discussion at a more formal level, share our points of view with other colleagues, listen what they had to say and, if possible, d- seminate the findings in our professional and academic communities.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781441960696
Publisher: Springer New York
Publication date: 06/21/2010
Series: International Series in Operations Research & Management Science , #144
Edition description: 2010
Pages: 243
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.70(d)

Table of Contents

1 Traffic Data Collection and Its Standardization Jaume Barceló Masao Kuwahara Marc Miska 1

2 Data Collection, Use and Provision at the Transport Data Centre, New South Wales, Australia Peter Hidas 11

3 Data Collection for Measuring Performance of Integrated Transportation Systems Wei-Bin Zhang Alex Skabardonis Meng Li Jingquan Li Kun Zhou Liping Zhang 25

4 International Traffic Database: Gathering Traffic Data Fast and Intuitive Marc Miska Hiroshi Warita Alexandre Torday Masao Kuwahara 47

5 Data Mining for Traffic Flow Analysis: Visualization Approach Takahiko Kusakabe Takamasa Iryo Yasuo Asakura 57

6 The Influence of Spatial Factors on the Commuting Trip Distribution in the Netherlands Tom Thomas Bas Tutert 73

7 Dynamic Origin-Destination Matrix Estimation Using Probe Vehicle Data as A Priori Information Rúna Ásmundsdóttir Yusen Chen Henk J. van Zuylen 89

8 Using Probe Vehicle Data for Traffic State Estimation in Signalized Urban Networks Henk J. van Zuylen Fangfang Zheng Yusen Chen 109

9 Floating Car Data Based Analysis of Urban Travel Times for the Provision of Traffic Quality Jan Fabian Ehmke Stephan Meisel Dirk Christian Mattfeld 129

10 A Cost-Effective Method for the Detection of Queue Lengths at Traffic Lights Thorsten Neumann 151

11 Extended Floating Car Data in Co-operative Traffic Management Thomas Scheider Martin Bühm 161

12 Microscopic Data for Analyzing Driving Behavior at Traffic Signals Francesco Viti Serge P. Hoogendoorn Henk J. van Zuylen Isabel R. Wilmink Bart van Arem 171

Index 193

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