Skip to main content

AIT powers up traffic AI Box set

Mobility Observation Box allows comparable, meaningful risk-based assessment of data
By Adam Hill April 7, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
The battery-operated system is quick and easy to install and de-install, the organisation says (© AIT)

Researchers from the Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT), in cooperation with Transoft Solutions, have developed a solution for measuring traffic conditions and ‘conflicts’ between vehicles on the road. 

The Mobility Observation Box (MOB), which sits at the roadside, collects video data on the effects of various infrastructural and traffic engineering measures on the risk of collisions and injuries.

It makes it possible to measure the safety of transport infrastructure according to objective criteria. This means, AIT says, that it allows comparable, meaningful risk-based assessment of data.

Machine learning algorithms and artificial intelligence automatically recognise different groups of road users – such as pedestrians, cyclists, cars, trucks or e-scooters – and evaluate how they move, which provides a basis for targeted mitigation measures. 

All road users within a traffic scene can be monitored to a high degree of precision, in a repeatable and unobtrusive way. Each road user is detected, classified, and tracked.

This data is then used to assess and provide metrics on road safety (such as near-collision and speeding incidents), as well as traffic flow conditions (volumes and speeds, for example). A better understanding of the conditions which lead up to a collision helps road authorities to improve infrastructure without relying solely on historical collision data.

MOB can also be used to plan or retrofit road systems to determine cost-effective recommendations for specific traffic safety measures.

The battery-operated system is quick and easy to install and de-install and does not require a supplemental power source. As it is small, traffic is not distracted or influenced by the MOB’s presence, the researchers say.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • SNCF uses ITS to make crossings safer
    May 19, 2021
    There are too many deaths where road and rail intersect: Virginie Taillandier, smart level crossing project manager at French rail group SNCF, outlines how ITS communications can help
  • Derq & CT go to Fremont
    December 9, 2021
    Derq and CT Group are partnering with the City of Fremont to deploy intersection analytics systems on a connected corridor.
  • Bespoke ITS is helping to reduced collisions on America’s rural roads
    October 22, 2014
    David Crawford cherrypicks conference and award highlights Almost 30% of all US citizens live in rural areas or very small communities, and 34 of the 50 states exceed this level in their own populations, with the proportions rising as high as 85%. And although rural routes carry only 35% of all traffic, the accidents that occur on them account for some 54% of all US road traffic accident deaths.
  • Cost Benefit: Utah traffic light scheme pays dividends
    March 15, 2019
    A traffic signal control scheme in Utah is being taken up by other US authorities. David Crawford finds out how the Beehive State is leading the way in DoT and driver savings Growing numbers of US state departments of transportation (DoTs) and their road users are gaining real financial benefits from an advanced approach to traffic signal monitoring recently developed in Utah. Central to the system is its use of automated traffic signal performance measures (ATSPM) technology, brought in to improve th