Self-Control of Traffic Lights and Vehicle Flows in Urban Road Networks
Stefan L\"ammer, Dirk Helbing

TL;DR
This paper introduces a self-organizing, decentralized traffic light control method based on vehicle flow interactions, leading to emergent coordination patterns like green waves and improved traffic efficiency.
Contribution
It proposes a novel self-organization approach for traffic light control that adapts to local conditions and achieves emergent synchronization without central coordination.
Findings
Reduces average travel times significantly
Achieves emergent synchronization of traffic lights
Adapts flexibly to changing traffic conditions
Abstract
Based on fluid-dynamic and many-particle (car-following) simulations of traffic flows in (urban) networks, we study the problem of coordinating incompatible traffic flows at intersections. Inspired by the observation of self-organized oscillations of pedestrian flows at bottlenecks [D. Helbing and P. Moln\'ar, Phys. Eev. E 51 (1995) 4282--4286], we propose a self-organization approach to traffic light control. The problem can be treated as multi-agent problem with interactions between vehicles and traffic lights. Specifically, our approach assumes a priority-based control of traffic lights by the vehicle flows themselves, taking into account short-sighted anticipation of vehicle flows and platoons. The considered local interactions lead to emergent coordination patterns such as ``green waves'' and achieve an efficient, decentralized traffic light control. While the proposed self-control…
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