Skip to main content

Looking 15 minutes into the future

Fourth annual Traffic4cast congestion prediction competition seeks AI expertise
By Alan Dron August 11, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Here data for the challenge is based on more than 100 billion GPS probe points (image credit: IARAI)

Members of the machine learning community are being challenged to use the latest AI methods to model and predict future traffic congestion levels and vehicle speeds across three major cities – London, Madrid and Melbourne – in the fourth annual Traffic4cast competition

The challenge has been set by the Institute of Advanced Research in Artificial Intelligence (IARAI), an independent global machine learning research institute, together with location data specialist Here Technologies. 

The event’s core challenge sees participants asked to predict congestion level classes (red/yellow/green) for the entire road graph 15 minutes into the future, using only the past hour of traffic loop counter data. 

In the extended challenge, contestants have to predict the average speeds on each road segment of the graph 15 minutes into the future, again, using only the previous hour’s traffic loop counter data.

Here provides the participants with traffic film clips based on two years of real-world data for the three cities.

The clips were created using Here data based on more than 100 billion GPS probe points from a large fleet of vehicles. 

The data is fully anonymised and transformed into movie clips that depict traffic over time, including morning, evening and rush hour traffic events. 

The competition’s aim is to reduce the barriers for using readily available, public loop counter data to predict future traffic state of entire cities. 

IARAI says that the Traffic4cast competition is unique in merging AI with real-world datasets and traffic research to advance the understanding of complex traffic dynamics and systems. 

Winners will receive prizes at NeurIPS 2022, the leading AI conference.
   
The three top-placed entries in the core challenge will receive vouchers or cash worth, respectively, €5,000, €3,000 and €2,000. All three teams will also receive one free NeurIPS 2022 conference registration.

Similar prizes will also be available for the top-placed three teams in the extended challenge. 
 
Submissions are due by October 15.

Related Content

  • November 29, 2022
    ITS Australia Awards: finalists revealed
    Cisco, Moovit and Q-Free are among the companies up for 13th ITS Australia Annual Awards
  • December 20, 2024
    Huawei addresses congested, separated rail networks with cloud solution
    A shift to a cloud-based operating regime solves the problems of trying to make cluttered, geographically-discrete terrestrial systems work together
  • February 3, 2012
    Healthy prospects for floating vehicle data systems
    Elmar Brockfeld, Alexander Sohr and Peter Wagner from the German Aerospace Center's Institute of Transport Systems look at the prospects for floating vehicle data systems. Although Floating Vehicle Data (FVD) or probe vehicle fleets have been around for about a decade, the idea behind them is of course much older: from probe vehicles that flow with the traffic it should be possible to get a precise, fast and spatially near-complete picture of the prevailing traffic flow conditions in an area under surveilla
  • January 9, 2023
    Synthetic data v the real thing
    ITS and smart cities thrive on data: but does all the data need to be real? Steve Harris of Mindtech explains why the answer could lie in combining elements of the real world with the synthetic