A Taxonomy of Adaptive Traffic Signal Control
Andalib Shams, A. M. Tahsin Emtenan, and Christopher M. Day

TL;DR
This paper reviews the history of adaptive traffic signal control (ATSC), proposes a comprehensive taxonomy to organize existing methods, and introduces a consistent vocabulary to facilitate future research in this diverse field.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed taxonomy and vocabulary for classifying and understanding the wide range of ATSC methods developed over decades.
Findings
Provides a structured classification of ATSC methods
Organizes control concepts into a comprehensive taxonomy
Facilitates understanding and future research in ATSC
Abstract
Research on adaptive traffic signal control (ATSC) extends back to at least the 1960s, and many ATSC methods have been proposed over the years. This paper provides a review of this research and proposes a taxonomy for organizing it, accompanied by a consistent vocabulary for discussing the control concepts. We begin from the well-established concept of control generations. Next, we classify the ATSC methods according to their topographic structure (local-only, system/hierarchical), time resolution of decision-making (continuous versus planning-horizon), type of decision (rule-based or optimization), objective function, cyclic/acyclic nature,and additional subcategories relevant to certain "families" of methods. These various elements of system control are organized into a taxonomy of ATSC to help future researchers understand the wide diversity of algorithmic approaches to the signal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraffic control and management · Transportation Planning and Optimization · Traffic Prediction and Management Techniques
